NHSRDatasets meets runcharter

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Big up the NHS –

Background

The NHSRDatasets package made it to CRAN recently, and as it is designed for use by NHS data analysts, and I am an NHS data analyst, let’s take a look at it. Thanks to Chris Mainey and Tom Jemmett for getting this together.

Load packages and data

As above let’s load what we need for this session. The runcharter package is built using data.table, but I’m using dplyr in this main section to show that you don’t need to know data.table to use it.

library(NHSRdatasets)
library(runcharter) # remotes::install_github("johnmackintosh/runcharter)
library(dplyr)
library(skimr)

However- seriously, do take a look at data.table. It’s not as hard to understand as some might have you believe. A little bit of effort pays off. You can load the runcharter package from github using the remotes package. (I’ve managed to install it on Windows and Ubuntu. Mac user? No idea, I’m a Band 6 UK public sector data analyst, so can only dream of such luxuries).

ae <- data("ae_attendances") # a promise
ae <- ae_attendances #  a string
rm(ae_attendances) # just typing 'ae' brings it to life in the environment

That felt a bit glitchy. There has to be a sleeker way to load and assign a built in dataset but I couldn’t find one. Cursory google here.

Let’s have a look at the data:

glimpse(ae)

## Observations: 12,765
## Variables: 6
## $ period      <date> 2017-03-01, 2017-03-01, 2017-03-01, 2017-03-01, 2...
## $ org_code    <fct> RF4, RF4, RF4, R1H, R1H, R1H, AD913, RYX, RQM, RQM...
## $ type        <fct> 1, 2, other, 1, 2, other, other, other, 1, other, ...
## $ attendances <dbl> 21289, 813, 2850, 30210, 807, 11352, 4381, 19562, ...
## $ breaches    <dbl> 2879, 22, 6, 5902, 11, 136, 2, 258, 2030, 86, 1322...
## $ admissions  <dbl> 5060, 0, 0, 6943, 0, 0, 0, 0, 3597, 0, 2202, 0, 0,...

Lot’s of factors. I’m actually very grateful for this package, as it caused me major issues when I first tried to plot this data using an earlier version of runcharter. I hadn’t considered factors as a possible grouping variable, which was a pretty big miss. All sorted now.

There’s way too much data for my tiny laptop screen, so I will filter the data for type 1 departments - the package help gives us a great link to explain what this means

type1 <- ae %>% 
  filter(type == 1) %>% 
  arrange(period)

# plot attendances
p <- runcharter(type1,
                med_rows = 13, # median of first 13 points
                runlength = 9, # find a run of 9 consecutive points
                direction = "above", # find run above the original median
                datecol = "period",
                grpvar = "org_code",
                yval = "attendances")

The runcharter function returns both a plot, and a data.table/ data.frame showing a summary of any runs in the desired direction (I’m assuming folk reading this have a passing knowledge of run charts, but if not, you can look at the package vignette, which is the cause of most of my commits!!)

Don’t try loading the plot right now, because it is huge, and takes ages. If we look at the summary dataframe,we can see 210 rows, a fairly decent portion of which relate to significant increases above the original median value

p$sustained

##      org_code median start_date   end_date  extend_to  run_type
##   1:      R0A  21430 2017-10-01 2018-10-01 2019-03-01  baseline
##   2:      R1F   3477 2016-04-01 2017-04-01 2017-05-01  baseline
##   3:      R1H  28843 2016-04-01 2017-04-01 2019-03-01  baseline
##   4:      R1K  11733 2016-04-01 2017-04-01 2019-03-01  baseline
##   5:      RA2   5854 2016-04-01 2017-04-01 2018-03-01  baseline
##  ---                                                           
## 206:      RGN  12473 2018-05-01 2019-01-01 2019-03-01 sustained
## 207:      RLT   6977 2018-03-01 2018-11-01 2019-03-01 sustained
## 208:      RQ8   8456 2018-03-01 2018-11-01 2019-03-01 sustained
## 209:      RTE  12610 2018-05-01 2019-01-01 2019-03-01 sustained
## 210:      RVV  14582 2018-03-01 2018-11-01 2019-03-01 sustained

Let’s use skimr to get a sense of this

skimr::skim(p$sustained)

## Skim summary statistics
##  n obs: 210 
##  n variables: 6 
## 
## -- Variable type:character -----------------------------------------------------------
##  variable missing complete   n min max empty n_unique
##  run_type       0      210 210   8   9     0        2
## 
## -- Variable type:Date ----------------------------------------------------------------
##    variable missing complete   n        min        max     median n_unique
##    end_date       0      210 210 2017-04-01 2019-03-01 2017-04-01        9
##   extend_to       0      210 210 2017-05-01 2019-03-01 2019-03-01        7
##  start_date       0      210 210 2016-04-01 2018-07-01 2016-04-01        9
## 
## -- Variable type:factor --------------------------------------------------------------
##  variable missing complete   n n_unique                     top_counts
##  org_code       0      210 210      139 RA4: 3, RDD: 3, RDE: 3, RGN: 3
##  ordered
##     TRUE
## 
## -- Variable type:numeric -------------------------------------------------------------
##  variable missing complete   n   mean      sd   p0     p25  p50      p75
##    median       0      210 210 9389.8 4317.54 3477 6468.25 8413 11311.25
##   p100     hist
##  29102 <U+2586><U+2587><U+2585><U+2581><U+2581><U+2581><U+2581><U+2581>

To keep this manageable, I’m going to filter out for areas that have median admissions > 10000 (based on the first 13 data points)

high_admits <- p$sustained %>% 
  filter(median > 10000 & run_type == "sustained") %>%
  select(org_code)

Then I change the org_code from factor to character, and pull out unique values. I’m sure there is a slicker way of doing this, but it’s getting late, and I don’t get paid for this..

I use the result to create a smaller data frame

high_admits$org_code <- as.character(high_admits$org_code)


type1_high <- type1 %>% 
  filter(org_code %in% high_admits$org_code)

And now I can produce a plot that fits on screen. I’ve made the individual scales free along the y axis, and added titles etc

p2 <- runcharter(type1_high,
                 med_rows = 13, # median of first 13 points as before
                 runlength = 9, # find a run of 9 consecutive points
                 direction = "above",
                 datecol = "period",
                 grpvar = "org_code",
                 yval = "attendances", 
                 facet_scales = "free_y",
                 facet_cols = 4,
                 chart_title = "Increased attendances in selected Type 1 AE depts",
                 chart_subtitle = "Data covers 2016/17 to 2018/19",
                 chart_caption = "Source : NHSRDatasets",
                 chart_breaks = "6 months")

Let’s look at the sustained dataframe

p2$sustained

##     org_code median start_date   end_date  extend_to  run_type
##  1:      RCB   9121 2016-04-01 2017-04-01 2018-03-01  baseline
##  2:      RDD  11249 2016-04-01 2017-04-01 2017-05-01  baseline
##  3:      RDE   7234 2016-04-01 2017-04-01 2017-05-01  baseline
##  4:      RGN   7912 2016-04-01 2017-04-01 2017-05-01  baseline
##  5:      RJ1  12240 2016-04-01 2017-04-01 2018-03-01  baseline
##  6:      RJE  14568 2016-04-01 2017-04-01 2018-05-01  baseline
##  7:      RJL  11262 2016-04-01 2017-04-01 2018-03-01  baseline
##  8:      RQM  16478 2016-04-01 2017-04-01 2018-03-01  baseline
##  9:      RRK   9584 2016-04-01 2017-04-01 2018-03-01  baseline
## 10:      RTE  11303 2016-04-01 2017-04-01 2017-05-01  baseline
## 11:      RTG  11344 2016-04-01 2017-04-01 2018-07-01  baseline
## 12:      RTR  10362 2016-04-01 2017-04-01 2018-03-01  baseline
## 13:      RVV  12700 2016-04-01 2017-04-01 2017-05-01  baseline
## 14:      RW6  22114 2016-04-01 2017-04-01 2017-05-01  baseline
## 15:      RWE  12275 2016-04-01 2017-04-01 2017-05-01  baseline
## 16:      RWF  11939 2016-04-01 2017-04-01 2018-03-01  baseline
## 17:      RWP   9976 2016-04-01 2017-04-01 2018-03-01  baseline
## 18:      RXC   9396 2016-04-01 2017-04-01 2018-03-01  baseline
## 19:      RXH  12494 2016-04-01 2017-04-01 2018-03-01  baseline
## 20:      RXP  10727 2016-04-01 2017-04-01 2017-05-01  baseline
## 21:      RYR  11578 2016-04-01 2017-04-01 2018-03-01  baseline
## 22:      RCB  10062 2018-03-01 2018-11-01 2019-03-01 sustained
## 23:      RDD  12093 2017-05-01 2018-01-01 2018-03-01 sustained
## 24:      RDE   7637 2017-05-01 2018-01-01 2018-03-01 sustained
## 25:      RGN  11896 2017-05-01 2018-01-01 2018-05-01 sustained
## 26:      RJ1  13570 2018-03-01 2018-11-01 2019-03-01 sustained
## 27:      RJE  15183 2018-05-01 2019-01-01 2019-03-01 sustained
## 28:      RJL  11972 2018-03-01 2018-11-01 2019-03-01 sustained
## 29:      RQM  18560 2018-03-01 2018-11-01 2019-03-01 sustained
## 30:      RRK  29102 2018-03-01 2018-11-01 2019-03-01 sustained
## 31:      RTE  11772 2017-05-01 2018-01-01 2018-05-01 sustained
## 32:      RTG  17169 2018-07-01 2019-03-01 2019-03-01 sustained
## 33:      RTR  10832 2018-03-01 2018-11-01 2019-03-01 sustained
## 34:      RVV  13295 2017-05-01 2018-01-01 2018-03-01 sustained
## 35:      RW6  22845 2017-05-01 2018-01-01 2019-03-01 sustained
## 36:      RWE  18173 2017-05-01 2018-01-01 2019-03-01 sustained
## 37:      RWF  12793 2018-03-01 2018-11-01 2019-03-01 sustained
## 38:      RWP  10358 2018-03-01 2018-11-01 2019-03-01 sustained
## 39:      RXC  10279 2018-03-01 2018-11-01 2019-03-01 sustained
## 40:      RXH  13158 2018-03-01 2018-11-01 2019-03-01 sustained
## 41:      RXP  11314 2017-05-01 2018-01-01 2019-03-01 sustained
## 42:      RYR  11970 2018-03-01 2018-11-01 2019-03-01 sustained
## 43:      RDD  12776 2018-03-01 2018-11-01 2019-03-01 sustained
## 44:      RDE  15322 2018-03-01 2018-11-01 2019-03-01 sustained
## 45:      RGN  12473 2018-05-01 2019-01-01 2019-03-01 sustained
## 46:      RTE  12610 2018-05-01 2019-01-01 2019-03-01 sustained
## 47:      RVV  14582 2018-03-01 2018-11-01 2019-03-01 sustained
##     org_code median start_date   end_date  extend_to  run_type

And of course, the plot itself

p2$runchart

runcharter

I haven’t looked into the actual data too much, but there are some interesting little facets here - what’s the story with RDE, RRK and RTG for example? I don’t know which Trusts these codes represent, but they show a marked increase.

The RGN (top right) and RVV (mid left) show the reason why I worked on this package - we can see that there has been more than one increase. Performing this analysis in Excel is not much fun after a while.

There is a lot more I can look at with this package, and we in the NHS-R community are always happy to receive more datasets for inclusion, so please contribute if you can.

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