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Multicriteria decision frontiers for prescription anomaly detection over time

Author

Listed:
  • Babak Zafari
  • Tahir Ekin
  • Fabrizio Ruggeri

Abstract

Health care prescription fraud and abuse result in major financial losses and adverse health effects. The growing budget deficits of health insurance programs and recent opioid drug abuse crisis in the United States have accelerated the use of analytical methods. Unsupervised methods such as clustering and anomaly detection could help the health care auditors to evaluate the billing patterns when embedded into rule-based frameworks. These decision models can aid policymakers in detecting potential suspicious activities. This manuscript proposes an unsupervised temporal learning-based decision frontier model using the real world Medicare Part D prescription data collected over 5 years. First, temporal probabilistic hidden groups of drugs are retrieved using a structural topic model with covariates. Next, we construct combined concentration curves and Gini measures considering the weighted impact of temporal observations for prescription patterns, in addition to the Gini values for the cost. The novel decision frontier utilizes this output and enables health care practitioners to assess the trade-offs among different criteria and to identify audit leads.

Suggested Citation

  • Babak Zafari & Tahir Ekin & Fabrizio Ruggeri, 2022. "Multicriteria decision frontiers for prescription anomaly detection over time," Journal of Applied Statistics, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 49(14), pages 3638-3658, October.
  • Handle: RePEc:taf:japsta:v:49:y:2022:i:14:p:3638-3658
    DOI: 10.1080/02664763.2021.1959528
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