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Big Data Application Designed for Customized Healthcare

By HospiMedica International staff writers
Posted on 14 Aug 2013
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Scientists have developed computer-aided technology that uses electronic medical records (EMRs) to offer the promise of rapid developments toward personalized healthcare, disease management, and wellness.

University of Notre Dame (South Bend, IN, USA) computer science associate professor Dr. Nitesh V. Chawla and his doctoral student, Darcy A. Davis, developed the system called Collaborative Assessment and Recommendation Engine (CARE) for personalized disease risk predictions and well-being.

“The potential for ‘personalizing’ healthcare from a disease prevention, disease management, and therapeutics perspective is increasing,” Dr. Chawla said. “Healthcare informatics and advanced analytics, or data science, may contribute to this shift from population-based evidence for healthcare decision-making to the fusion of population- and individual-based evidence in healthcare. The key question is how to leverage health population data to drive patient-centered healthcare.”

At the core of CARE is a unique collaborative filtering technique that captures patient similarities and produces personalized disease risk profiles for individuals. The system, using what called as Big Data science, generates predictions centered on other diseases that are based on Big Data from similar patients.

“In its most conservative use, the CARE rankings can provide reminders for conditions that busy doctors may have overlooked,” Dr. Chawla said. “Utilized to its full potential, CARE can be used to explore broader disease histories, suggest previously unconsidered concerns, and facilitate discussion about early testing and prevention, as well as wellness strategies that may ring a more familiar bell with an individual and are essentially doable. We believe that our work can lead to reduced re-admission rates, improved quality of care ratings and can demonstrate meaningful use, impact personal and population health, and push forward the discussion and impact on the patient-centered paradigm.”

Dr. Chawla stressed that the fundamental principle of CARE is centered on patient empowerment and patient engagement. “Imagine visiting your physician’s office with a list of concerns and questions. What if you could walk out of the office with a personalized assessment of your health, along with a list of personalized and important lifestyle change recommendations based on your predicted health risks? What if your physician was afforded a limitless experience to gauge the impact of your disease toward developing other diseases in the future? What if you could find out that there are other patients similar to you not only with respect to major symptoms, but also with respect to rare issues that have puzzled your doctor? What if you could have the experience of others at your fingertips and fathom the lifestyle changes warranted for mitigating diseases?”

Dr. Chawla believes the timing is right for CARE given changes in health care, reimbursement, reform, meaningful use of electronic health care data and a mandate for patient-centered outcomes. “The industry is seeing a move toward health and well-being and how that can be personalized to an individual,” he said. “There is an increased focus on preventive care, wellbeing, and reducing readmission rates in the hospital. This system can help bend the cost curve.”

CARE has been awarded a US patent. Drs. Chawla and Davis published an article describing the CARE system in the June 2013, issue of the Journal of General Internal Medicine.

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University of Notre Dame




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