A new study published in by 亚洲AV researchers and could help clinicians predict unreported opioid abuse by their patients.
Alemi and Avramovic in Mason鈥檚 and Mark Schwartz at New York University analyzed data from electronic health records to uncover correlations between patients鈥 diseases and substance abuse.
The researchers found that a variety of mental illnesses can be caused by or lead to substance abuse. For example, depression increased odds of substance abuse.聽
Other indicators of potential substance abuse were certain physical illnesses, drug seeking behavior, self-injury and a weakened immune system. For instance, a patient who repeatedly gets common infections or has difficulty recovering from them is likely to be experiencing the consequences of substance abuse.
鈥淲hat we鈥檙e hoping to do is start a conversation between health care providers and patients that can lead to treatment,鈥 Alemi said. 鈥淏y focusing on the medical complications from substance abuse, we can predict risk of future use and find it earlier than if we were following behaviors such as 鈥榙octor shopping.鈥 This approach could also help reduce the stigma around substance abuse and help the patients see the connection between their substance abuse and the negative health conditions they are experiencing.鈥
Data from 4.8 million veterans from Veterans Affairs Informatics and Computing Infrastructure from 2006 through 2016 were used to predict the patients鈥 diagnoses and the change in odds of substance abuse. The average age for the study cohort was 59.45 years. The majority of patients were male (96.5 percent) and white (34.5 percent).
鈥淎utomatically explaining the results of the screening remains our goal,鈥 Avramovic said. 鈥淲hile we have yet to put this in clinical practice and explain our predictions, we have established that the proposed method is practical and accurate.鈥
In the future, the researchers are interested in examining whether computers could be used to communicate the screening results to both clinicians and patients.
Jiaxi Zhang is a graduate student working in the College of Health and Human Services. 聽