What's in a Summary? Laying the Groundwork for Advances in Hospital-Course Summarization
Summarization of clinical narratives is a long-standing research problem. Here, we introduce the task of hospital-course summarization. Given the documentation authored throughout a patient's hospitalization, generate a paragraph that tells the story of the patient admission. We construct an En...
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Zusammenfassung: | Summarization of clinical narratives is a long-standing research problem.
Here, we introduce the task of hospital-course summarization. Given the
documentation authored throughout a patient's hospitalization, generate a
paragraph that tells the story of the patient admission. We construct an
English, text-to-text dataset of 109,000 hospitalizations (2M source notes) and
their corresponding summary proxy: the clinician-authored "Brief Hospital
Course" paragraph written as part of a discharge note. Exploratory analyses
reveal that the BHC paragraphs are highly abstractive with some long extracted
fragments; are concise yet comprehensive; differ in style and content
organization from the source notes; exhibit minimal lexical cohesion; and
represent silver-standard references. Our analysis identifies multiple
implications for modeling this complex, multi-document summarization task. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2105.00816 |