Pulseometer on finger

Clinical outcome modelling research

Explore our research in clinical outcome modelling

Clinical outcome modelling involves analysing health data to calculate the risk of a particular outcome happening to a patient. Outcomes could be anything from hospital admission to something as severe as death. We model clinical outcomes data to develop and evaluate new techniques for managing patient care to save lives and make healthcare services more effective, efficient and safe. 

Our work, in collaboration with colleagues at ºÚÁϳԹÏHospitals University Trust, has underpinned the development of the National Early Warning Score (NEWS) by the Royal College of Physicians. NEWS standardises the assessment and response to acute illness and is being adopted by every NHS acute hospital and ambulance service in Britain.

We use statistical and computing techniques within machine learning and data science to analyse large quantities of clinical data. We develop and evaluate mathematical or computer models that represent specific problems to make accurate predictions for patients. Our research is regularly published in leading journals including Resuscitation, Critical Care Medicine, and British Medical Journal Quality & Safety.

We're experts in taking healthcare data, using it securely, cleaning it to remove wrong or ambiguous data, and analysing it. Through working closely with clinical colleagues – particularly within ºÚÁϳԹÏhospitals – we've developed a strong understanding of what data represents about patients and their care. We draw on the clinical expertise of our health service providers to interpret our results. Working with our NHS partners, we use datasets of anonymised patient data which include vital signs, blood test results, diagnoses and other clinical information.

Industrial partners use the results of our research to develop systems, products and services that solve healthcare challenges. Our work helped The Learning Clinic Ltd develop a mobile clinical system using iPhones, iPod Touches and iPads to monitor and analyse patients' vital signs from their hospital bedside. The system calculates an early warning score that can give an indication of deterioration and trigger an escalation in care. Originally known as Vitalpac, it is now called CareFlow Vitals and owned by System C Ltd.

Collaborations and funders

As well as ºÚÁϳԹÏHospitals University Trust, we have partnered with Oxford University Hospitals NHS Trust, University of Oxford, University of Southampton, Bournemouth University and industrial partners The Learning Clinic Ltd and Xim Ltd. 

We have received funding from the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR), the Health Innovation Challenge Fund and Innovate UK Knowledge Transfer Partnership (KTP).

Project highlights

  • A collaborative research project led by the ºÚÁÏ³Ô¹Ï and involving the University of Southampton, Oxford University and ºÚÁϳԹÏHospitals University Trust, which aims to provide the first evidenced-based protocol for patient monitoring, which will be both safe and achievable across all acute NHS hospitals

  • A collaboration between the ºÚÁϳԹÏ, University of Oxford, ºÚÁϳԹÏHospitals University Trust, and Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, which aims to produce a hospital-wide IT system that enables a continuous risk assessment in all hospital patients, and predicts those at risk of deterioration

  • Standardising the assessment of acute-illness severity in the NHS – first produced in 2012 and updated in December 2017, NEWS2 is a system to standardise the assessment and response to acute illness, which has received formal endorsement from NHS England and NHS Improvement to become the early warning system for identifying acutely ill patients – including those with sepsis – in hospitals in England

  • Analysing outcomes for all patients with an abdominal emergency, whether they have surgery, an alternative treatment or no treatment.

  • The ºÚÁÏ³Ô¹Ï and ºÚÁϳԹÏHospitals University NHS Trust responded together in the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic to bring our research resources to bear on questions that could be answered based on the data available in the hospital and using the University's analysis skills.

Clinical Outcome Modelling researchers

James Stewart Briggs Portrait

Media ready expert

Professor Jim Briggs

Professor of Informatics

Associate Dean (Research)

Jim.Briggs@port.ac.uk

School of Computing

Faculty of Technology

PhD Supervisor

Read more

Discover our areas of expertise

Clinical outcome modelling is 1 area of expertise in the Health Informatics research area. Explore the others below.

Applied health informatics

We're researching the effective design and use of IT in health and social care to improve how practitioners communicate with patients and to promote patient wellbeing
Two nurses talking
Read more

Digital wellbeing

We're investigating how information technology – including communications and sensors – can be help people live long and healthy lives.
Computer and tablet
Read more

Cross reality applications

We're exploring how virtual reality (VR) can improve patient's physical and psychological rehabilitation, and developing VR simulations for a range healthcare applications.
Man wearing VR headset used in healthcare
Read more

Research groups

Centre for Healthcare Modelling and Informatics

We're working to develop technology that makes work more efficient for the organisations that form the National Health Service (NHS).

 


Interested in a PhD in Health Informatics?

Browse our postgraduate research degrees – including PhDs and MPhils – at our Health Informatics postgraduate research degrees page.