4.1 Article

Using machine learning to identify factors associated with practice location of the healthcare workforce

Journal

RURAL AND REMOTE HEALTH
Volume 22, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

COLL MEDICINE & DENTISTRY, JAMES COOK UNIV TOWNSVILLE
DOI: 10.22605/RRH7050

Keywords

dental; health care; location; machine learning; nursing; USA; workforce; pharmacy; physician

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This study used machine learning methods to explore factors associated with rural practice and found income and rural upbringing to be important predictors. Among the machine learning methods tested, support vector machine performed the best. These findings are significant for addressing healthcare professional shortages in rural areas.
Introduction: Past studies examined factors associated with rural practice, but none employed newer machine learning (ML) methods to explore potential predictors. The primary aim of this study was to identify factors related to practice in a rural area. Secondary aims were to capture a more precise understanding of the demographic characteristics of the healthcare professions workforce in Utah (USA) and to assess the viability of ML as a predictive tool. Methods: This study incorporated four datasets - the 2017 dental workforce, the 2016 physician workforce, the 2014 nursing workforce and the 2017 pharmacy workforce - collected by the Utah Medical Education Council. Supervised ML techniques were used to identify factors associated with practice location, the outcome variable of interest. Results: The study sample consisted of 11 259 healthcare professionals with an average age of 46.6 years, of which 36.6% were males and 94.5% Caucasian. Four ML methods were applied to assess model performance by comparing accuracy, sensitivity, specificity and area under the receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve. Of the methods used, support vector machine performed the best (accuracy 99.7%, precision 100%, sensitivity 100%, specificity 99.4% and ROC 0.997). The models identified income and rural upbringing as the top factors associated with rural practice. Conclusion: By far, income emerged as the most important factor associated with rural practice, suggesting that attractive income offers might help rural communities address health professional shortages. Rural upbringing was the next most important predictive factor, validating and updating earlier research. The performance of the ML algorithms suggests their usefulness as a tool to model other databases for individualized prediction.

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