Impact-MH

Project Leaders

Project Number

1U01MH136535-01

Awardee Organization

ICAHN SCHOOL OF MEDICINE AT MOUNT SINAI

Program Official

SARAH E. MORRIS

Project Description

Psychiatry faces a significant challenge in the absence of objective measures to assess behavior. Clinicians form clinical opinions based largely on their impressions from interviewing and what they read in the electronic health record. As a result, providing reliable prognoses on an individual basis are not possible right now. One untapped source of behavioral information for clinical decision-making is the clinical interview itself, which forms the foundation of the electronic health record (EHR). Every clinical visit provides a wealth of behavioral information comprising spoken language, eye contact, and facial expressions from both the patient and the clinician. Another source of behavioral data, which is ecologically valid, comes from smartphones, which provide physical activity metrics (e.g., step count, distance traveled), geolocation, social interactions (e.g., SMS messages and phone calls made and received), sleep patterns and audio data from diaries. By analyzing these rich behavioral datasets from routine clinical visits and smartphones, clinical signatures can be developed for specific clinically relevant outcomes in young help-seeking people, namely treatment disengagement, ER visits and hospitalizations. These individualized clinical signatures are important for the real-life situation that confronts both clinician and patient at the first visit to a mental health clinic. This proposal includes all new patients (N = 2100), ages 15 to 30, who seek treatment for the first time at one of six outpatient mental health clinics in the Mount Sinai Health system.

Aim 1 is to create a baseline clinical signature for outcomes using deep neural network modeling of legacy EHR data and baseline behavior, which includes audiovisual recordings of intake interviews, ratings of working alliance, and brief surveys and tests of cognition.

Aim 2 is to use Contextual Bandit to create a longitudinal clinical signature for outcomes based on subsequent behavioral data from clinical interviews (and their accompanying notes), and smartphone passive data and audio diary data. Contextual Bandit is a model that keeps updating probabilities and odds over time as it is given new data.

Aim 3 is to create clinical signatures based on EHR data alone, such that the added value of behavioral data for Aims 1 and 2 can be quantified. Study assessments are standard, low-cost, and easy to administer, with good variance, validity, reliability, and attention to bias. Across all aims, fusion will be used for behavioral feature extraction and natural language processing (NLP) for analysis of both written language (clinical text) and spoken language (clinical visits and audio diaries). Data science methods have been optimized for partnership with the DCC. Health equity, community engagement and ethical issues re privacy, informed consent and fairness have been prioritized.