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the international council on medical & care compunetics

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26
May, 2013
Sunday

Exploring the Ability of Natural Language Processing to Extract Data From Nursing Narratives

Abstract

Natural Language Processing (NLP) offers an approach for capturing data from narratives and creating structured reports for further computer processing. We explored the ability of a NLP system, Medical Language Extraction and Encoding (MedLEE), on nursing narratives. MedLEE extracted 490 concepts from narrative text in a sample of 553 oncology nursing process notes. The most frequently monitored and recorded signs and symptoms were related to chemotherapy care, such as adverse reactions, shortness of breath, nausea, pain, and bleeding. In terms of nursing interventions, chemotherapy, blood culture, medication, and blood transfusion were commonly recorded in free text. NLP may provide a feasible approach to extract data related to patient safety/quality measures and nursing outcomes by capturing nursing concepts that are not recorded through structured data entry. For better NLP performance in the domain of nursing, additional nursing terms and abbreviations must be added to MedLEE’s lexicon.
(C) 2009 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, Inc.

Hyun, Sookyung, Stephen B. Johnson, and Suzanne Bakken. "Exploring the Ability of Natural Language Processing to Extract Data From Nursing Narratives." Computers Informatics Nursing 27, no. 4 (July 2009): 215-223.  

4 July 2009

Bibliographic Data

Title:

Exploring the Ability of Natural Language Processing to Extract Data From Nursing Narratives

Author(s):

Hyun, Sookyung; Johnson, Stephen B.; Bakken, Suzanne

Journal

Computers Informatics Nursing, 27(4), pp. 215-223
(2009-07-01)

URL:

Abstract

DOI:

10.1097/NCN.0b013e3181a91b58

Keyword(s):

Data Capture, Data Extraction, Narrative, NLP, Oncology, Patient Safety, Quality

Citation:

Hyun, Sookyung, Stephen B. Johnson, and Suzanne Bakken. "Exploring the Ability of Natural Language Processing to Extract Data From Nursing Narratives." Computers Informatics Nursing 27, no. 4 (July 2009): 215-223.  

Other Publications

In ICMCC Database

All Computers Informatics Nursing articles (6).

Other article(s) by
Suzanne Bakken (5).

Discussion