Example clinician performance scores. An observed vs. expected 30-day
morality contingency table was constructed for each clinician based on the set
of patients they were responsible for in 2010–2013. A patient was counted
as “dead” if their death occurred within 30 days of their last
recorded admission order. The observed dead (DO) and alive
(AO) counts can be deduced directly from admission order and
mortality timestamps. The expected dead (DE) and alive
(AE) counts are predicted using 30-day mortality probabilities
generated by a L1-regularized logistic regression model trained on
2008–2009 patient data. In these examples, Clinician A has a lower O-to-E
ratio than Clinician B, but a larger quantity of data that yields more
confidence and thus an equivalent final score. Clinicians B and C have the same
observed-to-expected mortality ratio, but their scores differ due to varying
confidence in the estimate. Higher magnitude scores thus reflect a greater
effect size or certainty of deviation from the expected mortality rate.