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Learning from patient safety incident reports is a vital part of improving healthcare. However, the volume of reports and their largely free-text nature poses a major analytic challenge. The objective of this study was to test the capability of autonomous classifying of free text within patient safety incident reports to determine incident type and the severity of harm outcome. Primary care patient safety incident reports (n=31333) previously expert-categorised by clinicians (training data) were processed using J48, SVM and Naïve Bayes.The SVM classifier was the highest scoring classifier for incident type (AUROC, 0.891) and severity of harm (AUROC, 0.708). Incident reports containing deaths were most easily classified, correctly identifying 72.82% of reports. In conclusion, supervised ML can be used to classify patient safety incident report categories. The severity classifier, whilst not accurate enough to replace manual processing, could provide a valuable screening tool for this critical aspect of patient safety.

Original publication

DOI

10.1177/1460458219833102

Type

Journal article

Journal

Health informatics journal

Publication Date

12/2020

Volume

26

Pages

3123 - 3139

Addresses

Cardiff University, UK.

Keywords

Humans, Bayes Theorem, Primary Health Care, Patient Safety, Support Vector Machine, Supervised Machine Learning