Predictive modeling for infectious diarrheal disease in pediatric populations: A systematic review

Author:

Ogwel Billy12ORCID,Mzazi Vincent2,Nyawanda Bryan O.1,Otieno Gabriel3,Omore Richard1

Affiliation:

1. Kenya Medical Research Institute, Center for Global Health Research (KEMRI‐CGHR) Kisumu Kenya

2. Department of Information Systems University of South Africa Pretoria South Africa

3. Department of Computing United States International University Nairobi Kenya

Abstract

AbstractIntroductionDiarrhea is still a significant global public health problem. There are currently no systematic evaluation of the modeling areas and approaches to predict diarrheal illness outcomes. This paper reviews existing research efforts in predictive modeling of infectious diarrheal illness in pediatric populations.MethodsWe conducted a systematic review via a PubMed search for the period 1990–2021. A comprehensive search query was developed through an iterative process and literature on predictive modeling of diarrhea was retrieved. The following filters were applied to the search results: human subjects, English language, and children (birth to 18 years). We carried out a narrative synthesis of the included publications.ResultsOur literature search returned 2671 articles. After manual evaluation, 38 of these articles were included in this review. The most common research topic among the studies were disease forecasts 14 (36.8%), vaccine‐related predictions 9 (23.7%), and disease/pathogen detection 5 (13.2%). Majority of these studies were published between 2011 and 2020, 28 (73.7%). The most common technique used in the modeling was machine learning 12 (31.6%) with various algorithms used for the prediction tasks. With change in the landscape of diarrheal etiology after rotavirus vaccine introduction, many open areas (disease forecasts, disease detection, and strain dynamics) remain for pathogen‐specific predictive models among etiological agents that have emerged as important. Additionally, the outcomes of diarrheal illness remain under researched. We also observed lack of consistency in the reporting of results of prediction models despite the available guidelines highlighting the need for common data standards and adherence to guidelines on reporting of predictive models for biomedical research.ConclusionsOur review identified knowledge gaps and opportunities in predictive modeling for diarrheal illness, and limitations in existing attempts whilst advancing some precursory thoughts on how to address them, aiming to invigorate future research efforts in this sphere.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Health Information Management,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Health Informatics

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