AI Article Synopsis

  • Despite advances in preventive measures, acute respiratory infections (ARI) and diarrhoea remain leading causes of death in children under 5 globally.
  • Machine Learning (ML) techniques were used to analyze Uganda's DHS data from 2006-2016, focusing on rural-urban differences in predictors for these conditions and uncovering previously omitted variables.
  • The best-performing ML model, gradient-boosted machine, achieved high accuracy rates and identified key predictors such as household hygiene, maternal socio-economic status, child age, and immunization status that contribute to children's vulnerability to ARI and diarrhoea.

Article Abstract

Despite the widely known preventive interventions, the dyad of acute respiratory infections (ARI) and diarrhoea remain among the top global causes of mortality in under- 5 years. Studies on child morbidity have enormously applied "traditional" statistical techniques that have limitations in handling high dimension data, which leads to the exclusion of some variables. Machine Learning (ML) models appear to perform better on high dimension data (dataset with the number of features p (usually correlated) larger than the number of observations N). Using Uganda's 2006-2016 DHS pooled data on children aged 6-59 months, I applied ML techniques to identify rural-urban differentials in the predictors of child's diarrhoea and ARI. I also used ML to identify other omitted variables in the current child morbidity frameworks. The predictors were grouped into four categories: child characteristics, maternal characteristics, household characteristics and immunisation. I used 90% of the datasets as a training sets (dataset used to fit (train) a prediction model), which were tested or validated (dataset (pseudo new) used for evaluating the performance of the model on a new dataset) on 10% and 30% datasets. The measure of prediction was based on a 10-fold cross-validation (resampling technique). The gradient-boosted machine (ML technique) was the best-selected model for the identification of the predictors of ARI (Accuracy: 100% -rural and 100%-urban) and diarrhoea (Accuracy: 70%-rural and 100%-urban). These factors relate to the household's structure and composition, which is characterised by poor hygiene and sanitation and poor household environments that make children more suspectable of developing these diseases; maternal socio-economic factors such as education, occupation, and fertility (birth order); individual risk factors such as child age, birth weight and nutritional status; and protective interventions (immunisation). The study findings confirm the notion that ARI and diarrhoea risk factors overlap. The results highlight the need for a holistic approach with multisectoral emphasis in addressing the occurrence of ARI and diarrhoea among children. In particular, the results provide an insight into the importance of implementing interventions that are responsive to the unique structure and composition of the household. Finally, alongside traditional models, machine learning could be applied in generating research hypotheses and providing insight into the selection of key variables that should be considered in the model.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10021828PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgph.0000430DOI Listing

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