Publication | Open Access
Use of computer program for diagnosing jaundice in district hospitals and specialized liver unit.
40
Citations
10
References
1975
Year
DiagnosisGastroenterologyDiagnosticsDisease ClassificationMedical DiagnosisPublic HealthDisease DiagnosisLaboratory MedicineRadiologyDifferential DiagnosisComputer ProgramLiver TransplantationEpidemiologyComputer-assisted ModelDistrict HospitalsHepatologyDiagnostic SystemCollege HospitalPatient SafetyLiver UnitHepatitisAcute Liver FailureLiver DiseaseMedicineHealth InformaticsEmergency MedicineAutoimmune Hepatitis
A computer-assisted model for diagnosing jaundice has been adapted for use on the University of London C.D.C. 7600 computer via an on-line terminal at King's College Hospital to provide a rapid turn-round time. The model was used prospectively in the diagnosis of 219 patients--135 seen in a specialized liver unit and 84 seen in one of four district hospitals in south-east London--with an overall accuracy in distinguishing among 11 different causes of jaundice of 69% and 62% respectively. These figures rose to 77% and 88% respectively when only those patients in whom the final diagnosis reached a "certain" probability were considered. When used to distinguish between a medical and a surgical cause of jaundice the accuracy was 86% in the liver unit and 77% in the district hospitals, rising to 95% in both series for those with a diagnosis of certain probability. The proposed improvements to the model--namely, the use of two deparate data bases and more diagnoses within the matrix--should be improve the accuracy even further. In practice the rapid feedback to the clinicians looking after patients provided help in managing difficult cases.
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