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Characteristics of Finnish and Swedish intensive care nursing narratives: a comparative analysis to support the development of clinical language technologies

BACKGROUND: Free text is helpful for entering information into electronic health records, but reusing it is a challenge. The need for language technology for processing Finnish and Swedish healthcare text is therefore evident; however, Finnish and Swedish are linguistically very dissimilar. In this...

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Autores principales: Allvin, Helen, Carlsson, Elin, Dalianis, Hercules, Danielsson-Ojala, Riitta, Daudaravičius, Vidas, Hassel, Martin, Kokkinakis, Dimitrios, Lundgrén-Laine, Heljä, Nilsson, Gunnar H, Nytrø, Øystein, Salanterä, Sanna, Skeppstedt, Maria, Suominen, Hanna, Velupillai, Sumithra
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3194173/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21992572
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/2041-1480-2-S3-S1
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author Allvin, Helen
Carlsson, Elin
Dalianis, Hercules
Danielsson-Ojala, Riitta
Daudaravičius, Vidas
Hassel, Martin
Kokkinakis, Dimitrios
Lundgrén-Laine, Heljä
Nilsson, Gunnar H
Nytrø, Øystein
Salanterä, Sanna
Skeppstedt, Maria
Suominen, Hanna
Velupillai, Sumithra
author_facet Allvin, Helen
Carlsson, Elin
Dalianis, Hercules
Danielsson-Ojala, Riitta
Daudaravičius, Vidas
Hassel, Martin
Kokkinakis, Dimitrios
Lundgrén-Laine, Heljä
Nilsson, Gunnar H
Nytrø, Øystein
Salanterä, Sanna
Skeppstedt, Maria
Suominen, Hanna
Velupillai, Sumithra
author_sort Allvin, Helen
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Free text is helpful for entering information into electronic health records, but reusing it is a challenge. The need for language technology for processing Finnish and Swedish healthcare text is therefore evident; however, Finnish and Swedish are linguistically very dissimilar. In this paper we present a comparison of characteristics in Finnish and Swedish free-text nursing narratives from intensive care. This creates a framework for characterising and comparing clinical text and lays the groundwork for developing clinical language technologies. METHODS: Our material included daily nursing narratives from one intensive care unit in Finland and one in Sweden. Inclusion criteria for patients were an inpatient period of least five days and an age of at least 16 years. We performed a comparative analysis as part of a collaborative effort between Finnish- and Swedish-speaking healthcare and language technology professionals that included both qualitative and quantitative aspects. The qualitative analysis addressed the content and structure of three average-sized health records from each country. In the quantitative analysis 514 Finnish and 379 Swedish health records were studied using various language technology tools. RESULTS: Although the two languages are not closely related, nursing narratives in Finland and Sweden had many properties in common. Both made use of specialised jargon and their content was very similar. However, many of these characteristics were challenging regarding development of language technology to support producing and using clinical documentation. CONCLUSIONS: The way Finnish and Swedish intensive care nursing was documented, was not country or language dependent, but shared a common context, principles and structural features and even similar vocabulary elements. Technology solutions are therefore likely to be applicable to a wider range of natural languages, but they need linguistic tailoring. AVAILABILITY: The Finnish and Swedish data can be found at: http://www.dsv.su.se/hexanord/data/.
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spelling pubmed-31941732011-10-17 Characteristics of Finnish and Swedish intensive care nursing narratives: a comparative analysis to support the development of clinical language technologies Allvin, Helen Carlsson, Elin Dalianis, Hercules Danielsson-Ojala, Riitta Daudaravičius, Vidas Hassel, Martin Kokkinakis, Dimitrios Lundgrén-Laine, Heljä Nilsson, Gunnar H Nytrø, Øystein Salanterä, Sanna Skeppstedt, Maria Suominen, Hanna Velupillai, Sumithra J Biomed Semantics Proceedings BACKGROUND: Free text is helpful for entering information into electronic health records, but reusing it is a challenge. The need for language technology for processing Finnish and Swedish healthcare text is therefore evident; however, Finnish and Swedish are linguistically very dissimilar. In this paper we present a comparison of characteristics in Finnish and Swedish free-text nursing narratives from intensive care. This creates a framework for characterising and comparing clinical text and lays the groundwork for developing clinical language technologies. METHODS: Our material included daily nursing narratives from one intensive care unit in Finland and one in Sweden. Inclusion criteria for patients were an inpatient period of least five days and an age of at least 16 years. We performed a comparative analysis as part of a collaborative effort between Finnish- and Swedish-speaking healthcare and language technology professionals that included both qualitative and quantitative aspects. The qualitative analysis addressed the content and structure of three average-sized health records from each country. In the quantitative analysis 514 Finnish and 379 Swedish health records were studied using various language technology tools. RESULTS: Although the two languages are not closely related, nursing narratives in Finland and Sweden had many properties in common. Both made use of specialised jargon and their content was very similar. However, many of these characteristics were challenging regarding development of language technology to support producing and using clinical documentation. CONCLUSIONS: The way Finnish and Swedish intensive care nursing was documented, was not country or language dependent, but shared a common context, principles and structural features and even similar vocabulary elements. Technology solutions are therefore likely to be applicable to a wider range of natural languages, but they need linguistic tailoring. AVAILABILITY: The Finnish and Swedish data can be found at: http://www.dsv.su.se/hexanord/data/. BioMed Central 2011-07-14 /pmc/articles/PMC3194173/ /pubmed/21992572 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/2041-1480-2-S3-S1 Text en Copyright ©2011 Allvin et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Proceedings
Allvin, Helen
Carlsson, Elin
Dalianis, Hercules
Danielsson-Ojala, Riitta
Daudaravičius, Vidas
Hassel, Martin
Kokkinakis, Dimitrios
Lundgrén-Laine, Heljä
Nilsson, Gunnar H
Nytrø, Øystein
Salanterä, Sanna
Skeppstedt, Maria
Suominen, Hanna
Velupillai, Sumithra
Characteristics of Finnish and Swedish intensive care nursing narratives: a comparative analysis to support the development of clinical language technologies
title Characteristics of Finnish and Swedish intensive care nursing narratives: a comparative analysis to support the development of clinical language technologies
title_full Characteristics of Finnish and Swedish intensive care nursing narratives: a comparative analysis to support the development of clinical language technologies
title_fullStr Characteristics of Finnish and Swedish intensive care nursing narratives: a comparative analysis to support the development of clinical language technologies
title_full_unstemmed Characteristics of Finnish and Swedish intensive care nursing narratives: a comparative analysis to support the development of clinical language technologies
title_short Characteristics of Finnish and Swedish intensive care nursing narratives: a comparative analysis to support the development of clinical language technologies
title_sort characteristics of finnish and swedish intensive care nursing narratives: a comparative analysis to support the development of clinical language technologies
topic Proceedings
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3194173/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21992572
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/2041-1480-2-S3-S1
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