Abstract

Asthma puts a tremendous overhead on healthcare. To enable effective preventive care to improve outcomes in managing asthma, we recently created two machine learning models, one using University of Washington Medicine data and the other using Intermountain Healthcare data, to predict asthma hospital visits in the next 12 months in asthma patients. As is common in machine learning, neither model supplies explanations for its predictions. To tackle this interpretability issue of black-box models, we developed an automated method to produce rule-style explanations for any machine learning model's predictions made on imbalanced tabular data and to recommend customized interventions without lowering the prediction accuracy. Our method exhibited good performance in explaining our Intermountain Healthcare model's predictions. Yet, it stays unknown how well our method generalizes to academic healthcare systems, whose patient composition differs from that of Intermountain Healthcare. This study evaluates our automated explaining method's generalizability to the academic healthcare system University of Washington Medicine on predicting asthma hospital visits. We did a secondary analysis on 82,888 University of Washington Medicine data instances of asthmatic adults between 2011 and 2018, using our method to explain our University of Washington Medicine model's predictions and to recommend customized interventions. Our results showed that for predicting asthma hospital visits, our automated explaining method had satisfactory generalizability to University of Washington Medicine. In particular, our method explained the predictions for 87.6% of the asthma patients whom our University of Washington Medicine model accurately predicted to experience asthma hospital visits in the next 12 months.

Highlights

  • Tong et al.: Testing the Generalizability of an Automated Method for Explaining Machine Learning Predictions services on healthcare and other related aspects. This method is used by numerous healthcare systems including University of Washington Medicine, Kaiser Permanente Northern California [2], and Intermountain Healthcare, as well as many health plans encompassing those in nine of 12 metropolitan communities [3]

  • In 2011-2017, we had 68,244 data instances, 1.74% (1,184) of which linked to asthma hospital visits in the 12 months

  • In 2018, we had 14,644 data instances, 1.49% (218) of which linked to asthma hospital visits in the 12 months

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Summary

Introduction

The leading method for cutting down the number of asthma hospital visits involving hospitalizations and ED visits is to adopt a model to predict which asthma patients are most likely to incur poor outcomes at a later date. We place these patients into a care management program, letting care managers follow up with them regularly and help them book. Y. Tong et al.: Testing the Generalizability of an Automated Method for Explaining Machine Learning Predictions services on healthcare and other related aspects. We can use this method to avoid as many as 40% of future hospital visits of the patients [4]–[7]

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