Abstract

Reducing neonatal mortality is a critical global health objective, especially in resource-constrained developing countries. This study employs machine learning (ML) techniques to predict fetal health status based on cardiotocography (CTG) examination findings, utilizing a dataset from the Kaggle repository due to the limited comprehensive healthcare data available in developing nations. Features such as baseline fetal heart rate, uterine contractions, and waveform characteristics were extracted using the RFE wrapper feature engineering technique and scaled with a standard scaler. Six ML models—Logistic Regression (LR), Decision Tree (DT), Random Forest (RF), Gradient Boosting (GB), Categorical Boosting (CB), and Extended Gradient Boosting (XGB)—are trained via cross-validation and evaluated using performance metrics. The developed models were trained via cross-validation and evaluated using ML performance metrics. Eight out of the 21 features selected by GB returned their maximum Matthews Correlation Coefficient (MCC) score of 0.6255, while CB, with 20 of the 21 features, returned the maximum and highest MCC score of 0.6321. The study demonstrated the ability of ML models to predict fetal health conditions from CTG exam results, facilitating early identification of high-risk pregnancies and enabling prompt treatment to prevent severe neonatal outcomes.

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