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Journal of Primary Health Care Journal of Primary Health Care Society
Journal of The Royal New Zealand College of General Practitioners
RESEARCH ARTICLE (Open Access)

Acute admission risk stratification of New Zealand primary care patients using demographic, multimorbidity, service usage and modifiable variables

Chris Van Houtte 1 2 * , Chris Gellen 1 , Dipan Ranchhod 1
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

1 Tū Ora Compass Health, Level 4/22–28 Willeston Street, Wellington Central, Wellington 6011, New Zealand.

2 Present address: Plant and Food Research, 23 Batchelar Road, Palmerston, North 4410, New Zealand.


Handling Editor: Felicity Goodyear-Smith

Journal of Primary Health Care 14(2) 116-123 https://doi.org/10.1071/HC21174
Published: 21 June 2022

© 2022 The Author(s) (or their employer(s)). Published by CSIRO Publishing on behalf of The Royal New Zealand College of General Practitioners. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC-ND)

Abstract

Introduction: Risk stratification tools in primary care may help practices better identify high-risk patients and plan for their treatment. Patients of all ages can be at high risk of acute hospital admissions.

Aim: We aim to improve existing risk stratification tools by using larger datasets, and accounting for practice-level variations in hospitalisation rates and read-code quality.

Methods: This work has derived an acute admission risk stratification tool in the Wellington, Kāpiti Coast and Wairarapa regions of New Zealand. An open cohort, starting 1 March 2017 and finishing 1 November 2021, contains 319 943 patients. An accelerated failure time survival regression model is used to model acute admission risk. Candidate models are tested on holdout data using six different test metrics.

Results: Patient risk is most affected by demographic, and the frequency of recent healthcare system usage. Morbidity categories have less predictive capability, but may still be useful from a practical perspective. The preferred model has an area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUROC) of 0.75 for a 6-month forecast period.

Discussion: The model is straightforward to apply to other datasets. Although most of the highest-risk patients will be well-known to their primary care practices already, the model helps to identify the patients who are high risk but not regularly attendees of the practice, and may benefit from proactive care planning.

Keywords: algorithmic, care planning, Health Care Home, hospitalisation, morbidity, primary health care, risk assessment, risk stratification.


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