scholarly journals In Denial: Symptom Negation in New York City Emergency Department Chief Complaints

2017 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jessica Sell

ObjectiveTo describe the effect of symptom negation in emergencydepartment (ED) chief complaint data received by the New York City(NYC) Department of Health and Mental Hygiene (DOHMH), and todevise a solution to avoid syndrome and symptom misclassificationfor commonly used negations using SAS Perl Regular Expression(PRX) functions.IntroductionIn July 2016, 77% of ED data was transmitted daily via HealthLevel 7 (HL7) messages, compared to only 27% in July 2015(Figure). During this same period, chief complaint (CC) word counthas increased from an average of 3.8 words to 6.0 words, with atwenty-fold increase in the appearance of the word “denies” in thechief complaint (Figure). While HL7 messages provide robust chiefcomplaint data, this may also introduce errors that could lead tosymptom and syndrome misclassification.MethodsUsing SAS 9.4 and Tableau 9.3, we examined data submissionsfrom 14 EDs responsible for 97% of the occurrences of the word‘denies’ in chief complaints in July 2016.To account for variation in chief complaint format among hospitals,we developed three PRX patterns to identify entire phrases in thechief complaint data field that began with conjugations of the word“deny” followed by various combinations of words, punctuation,spaces, and/or characters.Pattern 1: '/DEN(Y|I(ES|ED|NG))(\s|\w|(\/)|(\+)|,|(\\)){1,}((\.)|(\|)|($)|(;)|(\))|(-))/’Pattern 2: '/DEN(Y|I(ES|ED|NG))(\s|\w|(\/)|(\+)|(\\)){1,}((\.)|(\|)|($)|(;)|(\))|(-)|(,))/';Pattern 3: '/DENIES:( |\w|\.|,){1,}/');We separated the ‘denies’ statement from the chief complaint andidentified commonly negated symptoms. We then defined symptomsusing keyword searches of the chief complaint and the ‘denies’statement. We compared symptom classification with and withoutthe consideration of symptom negation.ResultsOf the 14 EDs analyzed, we applied pattern 1 to 8 of the ED’s,pattern 2 to 5 EDs, and patterns 2 and 3 to 1 ED. Approximately98% of denies statements were extracted from chief complaints. Only2% of symptom negation was not captured due to uncommon chiefcomplaint format whose symptom negation didn’t meet one of thepreviously described PRX patterns.The most common words associated with a “denies” statementwere: pain, chest, fever, loc, shortness, breath, vomiting, nausea,travel, headache, recent, trauma, history, abdominal, injury, diarrhea,SOB (shortness of breath), V (vomit), Head, N (nausea), PMH (pastmedical history), suicidal, dizziness, homicidal and D (diarrhea) (seeTable).By not taking negation into consideration in symptom definitions,between 3.5% and 16.5% of symptom visits were misclassified.Symptom misclassification varied greatly by hospital, ranging from0% to 55%.ConclusionsAs hospitals in NYC implement HL7 messaging, symptomnegation is becoming increasingly common in chief complaint data.Current symptom definitions are based on keyword searches that donot take into account symptom negations. This leads to symptommisclassification, and could potentially cause false signals or inflatesyndrome baselines, causing true signals to go undetected. SAS PRXfunctions can be used to flexibly identify symptom negation patternsand exclude them from syndrome definitions. Future studies willquantify the effect symptom negation has had on signal frequency inNYC, and examine symptoms associated with other forms of negationsuch as “Personal Medical History”, “No” and “Negative.”Most Common Symptoms Denied in Emergency Department Chief Complaints

2012 ◽  
Vol 127 (2) ◽  
pp. 195-201 ◽  
Author(s):  
Brooke Bregman ◽  
Sally Slavinski

Objectives. Most animal bites in the United States are due to dogs, with approximately 4.7 million reports per year. Surveillance for dog and other animal bites requires a substantial investment of time and resources, and underreporting is common. We described the use and findings of electronic hospital emergency department (ED) chief complaint data to characterize patients and summarize trends in people treated for dog and other animal bites in New York City (NYC) EDs between 2003 and 2006. Methods. Retrospective data were obtained from the syndromic surveillance system at the NYC Department of Health and Mental Hygiene. We used a statistical program to identify chief complaint free-text fields as one of four categories of animal bites. We evaluated descriptive statistics and univariate associations on the available demographic data. The findings were also compared with data collected through the existing passive reporting animal bite surveillance system. Results. During the study period, more than 6,000 animal bite patient visits were recorded per year. The proportion of visits for animal bites did not appear to change over time. Dog bites accounted for more than 70% and cat bites accounted for 13% of animal bite patient visits. Demographic characteristics of patients were similar to those identified in NYC's passive surveillance system. Conclusions. Our findings suggest that the use of ED data offers a simple, less resource-intensive, and sustainable way of conducting animal bite surveillance and a novel use of syndromic surveillance data. However, it cannot replace traditional surveillance used to manage individual patients for potential rabies exposures.


1935 ◽  
Vol 31 (1) ◽  
pp. 145-145
Author(s):  
C. Kereszturi ◽  
W. Н. Park ◽  
P. Vogel ◽  
М. Sevine

With financial assistance from the New York City Department of Health and an insurance company, and with the participation of a significant number of technicians, they carried out a study that is noteworthy for the careful observation.


2004 ◽  
Vol 112 (11) ◽  
pp. 1183-1187 ◽  
Author(s):  
Adam M. Karpati ◽  
Mary C. Perrin ◽  
Tom Matte ◽  
Jessica Leighton ◽  
Joel Schwartz ◽  
...  

1999 ◽  
Vol 76 (2) ◽  
pp. 237-246 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jonathan Shuter ◽  
Peter L. Alpert ◽  
Max G. DeShaw ◽  
Barbara Greenberg ◽  
Chee Jen Chang ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Kelsie Cowman ◽  
Yi Guo ◽  
Liise-anne Pirofski ◽  
David Wong ◽  
Hongkai Bao ◽  
...  

Abstract We partnered with the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services to treat high-risk, non-admitted COVID-19 patients with bamlanivimab in the Bronx, NY per Emergency Use Authorization criteria. Increasing post-treatment hospitalizations were observed monthly between December 2020-March 2021 in parallel to the emergence of SARS-CoV-2 variants in New York City.


2003 ◽  
Vol 118 (2) ◽  
pp. 144-153 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pablo San Gabriel ◽  
Lisa Saiman ◽  
Katherine Kaye ◽  
Muriel Silin ◽  
Ida Onorato ◽  
...  

Objectives. Accurate surveillance of tuberculosis (TB) in children is critical because such cases represent recent transmission, but surveillance is difficult as only 10% to 50% of cases are culture-confirmed. Hospital-based sources were used to develop alternative surveillance to assess completeness of reporting for pediatric TB in northern Manhattan and Harlem from 1993 through 1995. Methods. Alternative surveillance sources included ICD-9-CM hospital discharge codes for active TB and gastric aspirate reports. Cases identified by alternative surveillance were compared with cases previously reported to the New York City Department of Health (NYC DOH). Results. Alternative surveillance detected 25 cases of possible pediatric TB, of which four (16%) had never been reported to the NYC DOH and three (12%) had been reported as suspect cases, but had not fulfilled the criteria for a reportable case of pediatric TB. Of these seven newly counted cases, three were detected by ICD-9-CM codes, three by a gastric aspirate log book, and one by both. In contrast, 13 other cases had been reported to the NYC DOH, but were undetected by our alternative surveillance; eight of these could be verified with available medical records. Thus, the demographic and clinical characteristics of the 25 detected and the eight undetected cases with available medical records were evaluated in this study. Conclusions. Alternative surveillance proved effective, was complementary to the NYC DOH surveillance efforts, and increased the number of pediatric TB cases identified during the study period by 21%.


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