Literature DB >> 28933946

Detecting Spatial Patterns of Disease in Large Collections of Electronic Medical Records Using Neighbor-Based Bootstrapping.

Maria T Patterson1, Robert L Grossman1,2,3,4.   

Abstract

We introduce a method called neighbor-based bootstrapping (NB2) that can be used to quantify the geospatial variation of a variable. We applied this method to an analysis of the incidence rates of disease from electronic medical record data (International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision codes) for ∼100 million individuals in the United States over a period of 8 years. We considered the incidence rate of disease in each county and its geospatially contiguous neighbors and rank ordered diseases in terms of their degree of geospatial variation as quantified by the NB2 method. We show that this method yields results in good agreement with established methods for detecting spatial autocorrelation (Moran's I method and kriging). Moreover, the NB2 method can be tuned to identify both large area and small area geospatial variations. This method also applies more generally in any parameter space that can be partitioned to consist of regions and their neighbors.

Entities:  

Keywords:  electronic medical records; geospatial correlation; geospatial variation of disease incidence

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28933946      PMCID: PMC5647508          DOI: 10.1089/big.2017.0028

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Big Data        ISSN: 2167-6461            Impact factor:   2.128


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