Data Mining and Health
Data Mining and Health
Data Mining and Health
5 August 2009
rcanlas@alumni.cmu.edu
at the
Australia
Data Mining in Healthcare:
Current Applications and Issues
By Ruben D. Canlas Jr.
Abstract
The successful application of data mining in highly visible fields like e-business, marketing
and retail have led to the popularity of its use in knowledge discovery in databases (KDD) in
other industries and sectors. Among these sectors that are just discovering data mining are the
fields of medicine and public health.
This research paper provides a survey of current techniques of KDD, using data mining tools
for healthcare and public health. It also discusses critical issues and challenges associated
with data mining and healthcare in general.
The research found a growing number of data mining applications, including analysis of
health care centers for better health policy-making, detection of disease outbreaks and pre-
ventable hospital deaths, and detection of fraudulent insurance claims.
The successful application of data mining in highly visible fields like e-business, marketing
and retail have led to its application in KDD in other industries and sectors. Among these sec-
tors just discovering it healthcare.
This research paper intends to provide a survey of current techniques of knowledge discovery
in databases using data mining techniques that are in use today in medical research and public
health. We also discuss some critical issues and challenges associated with the application of
data mining in the profession of health and the medical practise in general.
1.2 Objectives
The objectives of this paper are the following:
1. To enumerate current uses and highlight the importance of data mining in medicine and
public health,
2. To find data mining techniques used in other fields that may also be applied in the
health sector.
3. To identify issues and challenges in data mining as applied to the medical practise.
4. To outline some recommendations for discovering knowledge in electronic databases
through data mining.
2. METHODOLOGY
Due to resource constraints and the nature of the paper itself, the main methodology used for
this paper was through the survey of journals and publications in the fields of medicine, com-
puter science and engineering. The research focused on more recent publications, with 2000
as the cut off year.
3. RESEARCH FINDINGS
3.1 Data Mining in the Health Sector
The practise of using concrete data and evidence to support medical decisions (also known as
evidence-based medicine or EBM) has existed for centuries. John Snow, considered to be the
father of modern epidemiology, used maps with early forms of bar graphs in 1854 to discover
the source of cholera and prove that it was transmitted through the water supply, below (Tufte
1997).
Snow counted the number of deaths and plotted the victim’s addresses on the map as black
bars. He discovered that most of the deaths clustered towards a specific water pump in Lon-
don (center of the red circle in the map).
Snow and Nightingale were able to personally collect, sift through and analyze the mortality
data during their times because the volume of information was manageable. Today, the size of
the population, the amount of electronic data gathered, along with globalization and the speed
of disease outbreaks make it almost impossible to accomplish what the pioneers did.
This is where data mining becomes useful to healthcare. It has been slowly but increasingly
applied to tackle various problems of knowledge discovery in the health sector.
Data mining and its application to medicine and public health is a relatively young field of
study. In 2003, Wilson et al began to scan cases where KDD and data mining techniques were
applied in health databases. They found confusion in the field regarding what constituted data
mining. “Some authors refer to data mining as the process of acquiring information, whereas
others refer to data mining as utilization of statistical techniques within the knowledge dis-
covery process.” (Wilson et al. 2003)
Because of misconceptions still going on in the medical community about what data mining
comprises, let us first define what we mean by it. The generally accepted definition of data
mining today is the set of procedures and techniques for discovering and describing patterns
and trends in data (Witten and Frank 2005). We shall use this definition throughout the paper.
Despite the differences and clashes in approaches, the health sector has more need for data
mining today. There are several arguments that could be advanced to support the use of data
mining in the health sector, covering not just concerns of public health but also the private
health sector (which, in fact, as can be shown later, are also stakeholders in public health).
Data overload. There is a wealth of knowledge to be gained from computerized health re-
cords. Yet the overwhelming bulk of data stored in these databases makes it extremely diffi-
cult, if not impossible, for humans to sift through it and discover knowledge (Cheng, et al
2006).
In fact, some experts believe that medical breakthroughs have slowed down, attributing this
to the prohibitive scale and complexity of present-day medical information. Computers and
data mining are best-suited for this purpose. (Shillabeer and Roddick 2007).
Evidence-based medicine and prevention of hospital errors. When medical institutions apply
data mining on their existing data, they can discover new, useful and potentially life-saving
knowledge that otherwise would have remained inert in their databases. For instance, an on-
going study on hospitals and safety found that about 87% of hospital deaths in the United
States could have been prevented, had hospital staff (including doctors) been more careful in
avoiding errors (HealthGrades Hospitals Study 2007). By mining hospital records, such
safety issues could be flagged and addressed by hospital management and government regu-
lators.
Policy-making in public health. Lavrac et al. (2007) combined GIS and data mining using
among others, Weka with J48 (free, open source, Java-based data mining tools), to analyze
similarities between community health centers in Slovenia. Using data mining, they were
able to discover patterns among health centers that led to policy recommendations to their
Institute of Public Health. They concluded that “data mining and decision support methods,
including novel visualization methods, can lead to better performance in decision-making.”
More value for money and cost savings. Data mining al-
lows organizations and institutions to get more out of ex-
isting data at minimal extra cost. KDD and data mining
have been applied to discover fraud in credit cards and
insurance claims (Kou et al. 2004). By extension, these
techniques could also be used to detect anomalous pat-
terns in health insurance claims, particularly those oper-
ated by PhilHealth, the national healthcare insurance sys-
tem for the Philippines.
Early detection and/or prevention of diseases. Cheng, et al cited the use of classification al-
gorithms to help in the early detection of heart disease, a major public health concern all over
the world. Cao et al (2008) described the use of data mining as a tool to aid in monitoring
trends in the clinical trials of cancer vaccines. By using data mining and visualization, medi-
cal experts could find patterns and anomalies better than just looking at a set of tabulated
data.
Early detection and management of pandemic diseases and public health policy formulation.
Health experts have also begun to look at how to apply data mining for early detection and
management of pandemics. Kellogg et al. (2006) outlined techniques combining spatial mod-
eling, simulation and spatial data mining to find interesting characteristics of disease out-
break. The analysis that resulted from data mining in the simulated environment could then
be used towards more informed policy-making to detect and manage disease outbreaks.
Non-invasive diagnosis and decision support. Some diagnostic and laboratory procedures are
invasive, costly and painful to patients. An example of this is conducting a biopsy in women
to detect cervical cancer. Thangavel et al (2006) used the K-means clustering algorithm to
analyze cervical cancer patients and found that clustering found better predictive results than
existing medical opinion. They found a set of interesting attributes that could be used by doc-
tors as additional support on whether or not to recommend a biopsy for a patient suspected of
having the cervical cancer.
Gorunescu (2009) described how computer-aided diagnosis (CAD) and endoscopic ultra-
sonographic elastography (EUSE) were enhanced by data mining to create a new non-
invasive cancer detection. In the traditional approach, doctors look at the ultrasound movie
and decide on whether a patient is to be subjected to a biopsy.
The physician’s judgment is primarily subjective, depending mostly on the her interpretation
of the ultrasound video (see sample video screenshot, next page). Gorunescu approached this
problem in a different way, using data mining. He did not study patient demographics. In-
stead his team focused on the ultrasound movies. They first trained a classification algorithm
using a multi-layer perceptron (MLP) on known cases of malignant and benign tumors.
Adverse drug events (ADEs). Some drugs and chemicals that have been approved as non-
harmful to humans are later discovered to have harmful effects after long-term public use.
Wilson et al. (2003) revealed that the US Food and Drug Administration uses data mining to
discover knowledge about drug side effects in their database. This algorithm called MGPS or
Multi-item Gamma Poisson Shrinker was able to successfully find 67% of ADEs five years
before they were detected using traditional ways.
We have seen how data mining applications could be used in early detection of diseases, pre-
vention of deaths, the improvement of diagnoses and even detecting fraudulent health claims.
However, there are caveats to the use of data mining in healthcare.
In medical research, data mining starts with a hypothesis and then the results are adjusted to
fit the hypothesis. This diverges from standard data mining practise, which simply starts with
the data set without an apparent hypothesis.
Also, whereas traditional data mining is concerned about patterns and trends in data sets, data
mining in medicine is more interested in the minority that do not conform to the patterns and
trends. What heightens this difference in approach is the fact that most standard data mining
is concerned mostly with describing but not explaining the patterns and trends. In contrast,
medicine needs those explanations because a slight difference could change the balance be-
tween life or death.
For example, anthrax and influenza share the same symptoms of respiratory problems. Low-
ering the threshold signal in a data mining experiment may either raise an anthrax alarm
when there is only a flu outbreak. The converse is even more fatal: a perceived flu outbreak
turns out to be an anthrax epidemic (Wong et al 2005). It is no coincidence that we found
that, in most of the data mining papers on disease and treatment, the conclusions were
almost-always vague and cautious. Many would report encouraging results but recommend
The confusion about the definition of data mining also complicates the issue. For example,
we found a couple of papers with the keywords “data mining” in their titles but turned out to
be the simple use of graphs. Shillabeer (2009) said that this misunderstanding is prevalent in
the relatively young existence of data mining in healthcare.
Even if data mining results are credible, convincing the health practitioners to change their
habits based on evidence may be a bigger problem. Ayres (2008) reports a couple of cases
where hospital doctors refused to change hospital policy even when confronted with evi-
dence. In one case, it was found that doctors coming out of autopsy without washing hands
and led to a high probability of deaths in the patients they treated after the autopsy. Presented
with this evidence, doctors still refused to change their habits until only much later.
Shillabeer (2009) also reported most doctors (at least in Australia) prefer to listen to a re-
spected opinion leader in the medical profession, rather than to the result of data mining.
Shillabeer’s observation can be validated by us, since we have worked worked with doctors
in a medical school in our capacity as an organizational management consultant.
Privacy of records and ethical use of patient information is also one big obstacle for data min-
ing in healthcare. For data mining to be more accurate, it needs a sizeable amount of real re-
cords. Healthcare records are private information and yet, using these private records may
help stop deadly diseases.
For example, DOH could coordinate with government-operated hospitals, PhilHealth and the
National Statistics Office to collate and analyze public health indicators. They could apply
data mining techniques to find trends in disease outbreaks or deaths (eg, infant mortality), per
region and per hospital.
DOH could uncover hidden patterns in deaths or disease that could lead to better health poli-
cies like better vaccination planning, identification of disease vectors like malaria, prevention
Before embarking on data mining, however, an organization must formulate clear policies on
the privacy and security of patient records. It must enforce this policy with its partner-
stakeholders and its branches and agencies.
Public health concerns like rapid pandemic outbreaks, the need to detect the onset of disease
in a non-invasive, painless way, and the need to be more responsive to its customers -- all
these add up to an increasing need for health organizations to integrate data and apply data
mining to analyze these data sets.
D a t a M i n i n g i n H e a l t h c a r e / 10
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