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Combining physician's subjective and physiology-based objective mortality risk predictions.

J P Marcin1, M M Pollack, K M Patel

  • 1Department of Pediatrics, University of California, Davis, Sacramento, USA.

Critical Care Medicine
|August 31, 2000
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

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Healthcare providers' subjective mortality predictions and the Pediatric Risk of Mortality (PRISM) III model performed similarly. Combining both using Bayesian statistics created a more accurate mortality prediction model for improved patient care.

Area of Science:

  • Pediatric critical care medicine
  • Clinical decision support systems
  • Biostatistics

Background:

  • Current physiology-based mortality risk models lack subjective clinical judgment.
  • Integrating healthcare professional insights could enhance prediction accuracy and system acceptance.

Purpose of the Study:

  • Compare subjective mortality estimates from physicians and nurses with the PRISM III model.
  • Evaluate a Bayesian model combining subjective and PRISM III predictions.

Main Methods:

  • Concurrent cohort study in a tertiary pediatric intensive care unit.
  • Collected subjective mortality estimates and certainty from attending physicians, fellows, residents, and nurses for 642 patients.
  • Utilized Bayesian statistics to integrate PRISM III scores with certainty-weighted subjective predictions.

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Main Results:

  • PRISM III, physicians, and nurses demonstrated strong mortality discrimination (AUCs 0.924–0.953).
  • The Bayesian model achieved superior accuracy and calibration compared to PRISM III and individual provider estimates.
  • Provider estimates were not significantly different from PRISM III, but the Bayesian model outperformed both.

Conclusions:

  • Subjective provider predictions and PRISM III have comparable performance.
  • A Bayesian approach combining subjective and objective data yields a more accurate mortality prediction model.
  • This hybrid model offers potential for improved individual patient decision support and clinical acceptance.