The presentation of an acutely ill young infant presents health workers, especially those in developing countries, with a very difficult problem. Serious infections are the main cause of morbidity and mortality in infants under 3 months of age in these countries, and diagnosing the severity of the illness is rather difficult.
To study this problem, the World Health Organization (WHO) collected data on a number of readily accessible variables such as vital signs, family history, and clinical observations resulting from physical examination. The patients’ disease status was later determined based on the course of the disease and various laboratory tests. The goal of the study was to develop a early prediction rule for grading the severity of the disease so that timely treatment could be delivered (and costly but unnecessary treatments avoided).
The WHO study looked at several acute respiratory illnesses in several countries. This data set contains data on pneumonia from the country Ethiopia.
y
: A pneumonia score, measured on the following scale: 1=No disease, 2=Cold/cough, 3=Pneumonia, 4=Severe pneumonia, 5=Life-threatening illness.X
: Each row of X
represents an individual.
biwt
: Birth weighthcir
: Head circumferencewght
: Weight (in grams)lgth
: Length (in centimeters)temp
: Temperature (in Celsius)hrat
: Heart rateage
: Age (in days)rr
: Adjusted respiratory ratewaz
: Weight-for-age (z-score)omph
: omphalitis (0-1)conj
: conjunctivitis (0-1)slpm
: sleeping more (0-1)slpl
: sleeping less (0-1)wake
: wakes less easy (0-1)convul
: history of convulsion (0-1)hfa
: history of abnormal feeding (0-3)hfb
: fast breathing (0-1)hfe
: history of fever (0-1)hap
: history of stop breathing (0-1)hcl
: less activity (0-1)hcm
: crying more (0-1)hcs
: crying less (0-1)hdi
: history of diarrhoea (0-1)hvo
: vomit more (0-1)bat
: birth preterm (0-1)fde
: fever at delivery (0-1)chi
: previous child died (0-1)hbr
: engorged breasts (0-1)twb
: water broke (0-1)ldy
: days in labour (1-9)inc
: respiratory distress (0-2)sr1
: respiratory state (0-3)sr2
: respiratory state (0-3); I do not know why this is measured twiceapn
: apnea (0-1)lcw
: lower chest in-drawing (0-3)nfl
: nasal flaring (0-3)str
: stridor (0-2)gru
: grunting (0-2)coh
: cough heard (0-1)ccy
: central cyanosis (0-1)jau
: jaundice (0-1)csd
: drowsy state (0-2)csa
: agitated state (0-1)aro
: arousal (0-2)qcr
: quality of crying (0-2)con
: consolability (0-2)att
: attentive (0-2)mvm
: amount of movement (0-2)afe
: drinking ability (0-2)absu
: sucking ability (0-2)stu
: skin turgor (0-2)deh
: dehydrated (0-2)dcp
: digital capillary refill (0-2)crs
: crepitation (0-2)skr
: skin rash (0-2)abb
: bulging fontanelle (0-1)abk
: sunken fontanelle (0-1)hyp
: hypotonia (0-3)whz
: wheezing (0-1)hdb
: difficulty breathing (0-1)smi2
: smiling abilitypuskin
: pustular skin rash (0-1)abd
: abdominal distension (0-4)nut
: nutritional status score (0-3)oto
: otoscopy impression (0-2)oab
: sclerema (0-1)I obtained the data from http://biostat.mc.vanderbilt.edu/wiki/Main/DataSets. The original reference is:
Harrell F, Margolis P, Gove S, Mason K, Mulholland E, Lehmann D, Muhe L, Gatchalian S and Eichenwald H (1998). Development of a clinical prediction model for an ordinal outcome: the World Health Organization multicentre study of clinical signs and etiological agents of pneumonia, sepsis and meningitis in young infants. Statistics in Medicine, 17: 909-944.