Literature DB >> 28426795

Properties of healthcare teaming networks as a function of network construction algorithms.

Martin S Zand1,2,3, Melissa Trayhan1,3, Samir A Farooq1,3, Christopher Fucile1,4, Gourab Ghoshal5, Robert J White1,3, Caroline M Quill1,6, Alexander Rosenberg1,4, Hugo Serrano Barbosa5, Kristen Bush1,2, Hassan Chafi7, Timothy Boudreau7.   

Abstract

Network models of healthcare systems can be used to examine how providers collaborate, communicate, refer patients to each other, and to map how patients traverse the network of providers. Most healthcare service network models have been constructed from patient claims data, using billing claims to link a patient with a specific provider in time. The data sets can be quite large (106-108 individual claims per year), making standard methods for network construction computationally challenging and thus requiring the use of alternate construction algorithms. While these alternate methods have seen increasing use in generating healthcare networks, there is little to no literature comparing the differences in the structural properties of the generated networks, which as we demonstrate, can be dramatically different. To address this issue, we compared the properties of healthcare networks constructed using different algorithms from 2013 Medicare Part B outpatient claims data. Three different algorithms were compared: binning, sliding frame, and trace-route. Unipartite networks linking either providers or healthcare organizations by shared patients were built using each method. We find that each algorithm produced networks with substantially different topological properties, as reflected by numbers of edges, network density, assortativity, clustering coefficients and other structural measures. Provider networks adhered to a power law, while organization networks were best fit by a power law with exponential cutoff. Censoring networks to exclude edges with less than 11 shared patients, a common de-identification practice for healthcare network data, markedly reduced edge numbers and network density, and greatly altered measures of vertex prominence such as the betweenness centrality. Data analysis identified patterns in the distance patients travel between network providers, and a striking set of teaming relationships between providers in the Northeast United States and Florida, likely due to seasonal residence patterns of Medicare beneficiaries. We conclude that the choice of network construction algorithm is critical for healthcare network analysis, and discuss the implications of our findings for selecting the algorithm best suited to the type of analysis to be performed.

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Year:  2017        PMID: 28426795      PMCID: PMC5398561          DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0175876

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  PLoS One        ISSN: 1932-6203            Impact factor:   3.240


  36 in total

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Review 4.  Reproducibility in science: improving the standard for basic and preclinical research.

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6.  The structure of critical care transfer networks.

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7.  Mapping and modeling of physician collaboration network.

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Review 8.  Health professional networks as a vector for improving healthcare quality and safety: a systematic review.

Authors:  Frances C Cunningham; Geetha Ranmuthugala; Jennifer Plumb; Andrew Georgiou; Johanna I Westbrook; Jeffrey Braithwaite
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9.  Application of social network analysis to health care sectors.

Authors:  Hae Lan Jang; Young Sung Lee; Ji-Young An
Journal:  Healthc Inform Res       Date:  2012-03-31

10.  Diversity of individual mobility patterns and emergence of aggregated scaling laws.

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Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2013       Impact factor: 4.379

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  2 in total

Review 1.  A scoping review of patient-sharing network studies using administrative data.

Authors:  Eva H DuGoff; Sara Fernandes-Taylor; Gary E Weissman; Joseph H Huntley; Craig Evan Pollack
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2.  Regional medical inter-institutional cooperation in medical provider network constructed using patient claims data from Japan.

Authors:  Yu Ohki; Yuichi Ikeda; Susumu Kunisawa; Yuichi Imanaka
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  2 in total

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