Moonstone: a novel natural language processing system for inferring social risk from clinical narratives.

Journal: Journal of biomedical semantics
Published Date:

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Social risk factors are important dimensions of health and are linked to access to care, quality of life, health outcomes and life expectancy. However, in the Electronic Health Record, data related to many social risk factors are primarily recorded in free-text clinical notes, rather than as more readily computable structured data, and hence cannot currently be easily incorporated into automated assessments of health. In this paper, we present Moonstone, a new, highly configurable rule-based clinical natural language processing system designed to automatically extract information that requires inferencing from clinical notes. Our initial use case for the tool is focused on the automatic extraction of social risk factor information - in this case, housing situation, living alone, and social support - from clinical notes. Nursing notes, social work notes, emergency room physician notes, primary care notes, hospital admission notes, and discharge summaries, all derived from the Veterans Health Administration, were used for algorithm development and evaluation.

Authors

  • Mike Conway
    Department of Biomedical Informatics, School of Medicine University of Utah 421 Wakara Way Ste 140, Salt Lake City, UT 84108-3514, USA.
  • Salomeh Keyhani
    San Francisco Veteran Affair Health Care System, San Francisco, CA USA.
  • Lee Christensen
    Department of Biomedical Informatics, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT.
  • Brett R South
    University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah, USA.
  • Marzieh Vali
    San Francisco VA Medical Center, 4150 Clement Street, San Francisco, 94121, CA, USA.
  • Louise C Walter
    San Francisco VA Medical Center, 4150 Clement Street, San Francisco, 94121, CA, USA.
  • Danielle L Mowery
    Biomedical Informatics, University of Utah School of Medicine, Salt Lake City, UT.
  • Samir Abdelrahman
    Department of Biomedical Informatics, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, USA.
  • Wendy W Chapman
    School of Medicine, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah, US.