Healthcare Healthcare News Medical Science and Technology

Early-warning tech detecting patient deterioration success in CSIRO study

Share

CSIRO scientists have led a study to develop a machine learning tool that gives medical professionals early warning of the condition of patient deterioration.

The study was done in collaboration with Brisbane’s Princess Alexandra Hospital and Metro South Hospital and Health Service and applied to a test cohort of more than 18,000 patient records.

It found that early-warning deterioration alerts can be set to monitor patients for two to eight hours before they are alerted by current clinical measures.

Researchers say medical professionals can use the data found in electronic medical records to predict when a patient’s vitals and condition might decline.

“Until now there hasn’t been a way to harness all the data in the EMR to predict patient health,” the CSIRO’s Dr Sankalp Khanna said.

“This new tool has the potential to transform the day-to-day functioning of health systems.”

With the data that comes with EMR, this information can be used to assist medical staff in decisions regarding a patient’s health and care.

Until recently, some hospital and patient data were not accessible electronically, which restricted the ability to develop digital tools from it.

“Our scientists hold expertise in transforming data into usable information to help guide clinical choices,” Dr Khanna said.

“The new tool also sets out the reasons for the warning, which can guide the choice of intervention.

“Clinical decision support tools such as these are a pre-emptive solution that can provide medical staff with an opportunity to intervene earlier to prevent adverse patient outcomes.”

In the test cohort, the tool had a 100% sensitivity for prediction windows two to eight hours in advance.

This was for patients that were identified at 95%, 85%, and 70% risk of deteriorating.

Dr David Cook, an ICU staff specialist at the PA Hospital, said the tool could be implemented at large hospitals to manage unexpected patient deterioration.

“It is done without process duplication, nor does it interfere with established best practice systems which are used to recognise sick and deteriorating ward patients,” he said.

A clinical trial is being discussed by CSIRO scientists and partners to find how the alerts work and their best implementation.

Original content from AAP. Note: Content has been edited for style and length.

Website | + posts

Ritchelle is a Content Producer for Healthcare Channel, Australia’s premier resource of information for healthcare.

Tags:

You Might also Like

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Related Stories

Next Up