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Efficient Prediction of Missed Clinical Appointment Using Machine Learning.

Authors :
Qureshi, Zeeshan
Maqbool, Ayesha
Mirza, Alina
Iqbal, Muhammad Zubair
Afzal, Farkhanda
Kanubala, Deborah Dormah
Rana, Tauseef
Umair, Mir Yasir
Wakeel, Abdul
Shah, Said Khalid
Source :
Computational & Mathematical Methods in Medicine. 10/22/2021, p1-10. 10p.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Public health and its related facilities are crucial for thriving cities and societies. The optimum utilization of health resources saves money and time, but above all, it saves precious lives. It has become even more evident in the present as the pandemic has overstretched the existing medical resources. Specific to patient appointment scheduling, the casual attitude of missing medical appointments (no-show-ups) may cause severe damage to a patient's health. In this paper, with the help of machine learning, we analyze six million plus patient appointment records to predict a patient's behaviors/characteristics by using ten different machine learning algorithms. For this purpose, we first extracted meaningful features from raw data using data cleaning. We applied Synthetic Minority Oversampling Technique (SMOTE), Adaptive Synthetic Sampling Method (Adasyn), and random undersampling (RUS) to balance our data. After balancing, we applied ten different machine learning algorithms, namely, random forest classifier, decision tree, logistic regression, XG Boost, gradient boosting, Adaboost Classifier, Naive Bayes, stochastic gradient descent, multilayer perceptron, and Support Vector Machine. We analyzed these results with the help of six different metrics, i.e., recall, accuracy, precision, F1-score, area under the curve, and mean square error. Our study has achieved 94% recall, 86% accuracy, 83% precision, 87% F1-score, 92% area under the curve, and 0.106 minimum mean square error. Effectiveness of presented data cleaning and feature selection is confirmed by better results in all training algorithms. Notably, recall is greater than 75%, accuracy is greater than 73%, F1-score is more significant than 75%, MSE is lesser than 0.26, and AUC is greater than 74%. The research shows that instead of individual features, combining different features helps make better predictions of a patient's appointment status. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1748670X
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Computational & Mathematical Methods in Medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
153164892
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1155/2021/2376391