https://www.selleckchem.com/products/bt-11.html This year less than 200 National Library of Medicine indexers expect to index 1 million articles, and this would not be possible without the assistance of the Medical Text Indexer (MTI) system. MTI is an automated indexing system that provides MeSH main heading/subheading pair recommendations to assist indexers with their heavy workload. Over the years, a lot of research effort has focused on improving main heading prediction performance, but automated fine-grained indexing with main heading/subheading pairs has received much less attention. This work revisits the subheading attachment problem, and demonstrates very significant performance improvements using modern Convolutional Neural Network classifiers. The best performing method is shown to outperform the current MTI implementation with a 3.7% absolute improvement in precision, and a 27.6% absolute improvement in recall. We also conducted a manual review of false positive predictions, and 70% were found to be acceptable indexing.Brigham and Women's Hospital (BWH) has received funding from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) to design and implement an electronic clinical quality measure (eCQM) assessing the rate of prolonged opioid prescribing practices following Total Hip Arthroplasty (THA) and Total Knee Arthroplasty (TKA). Utilizing an existing guideline, 'prolonged prescribing' has been defined as opioid prescriptions that exceed 42 days (6 weeks) following surgery. This measure was tested on 12,803 Partners' Healthcare (PHS) patients. Findings demonstrated that after 42 days, meeting the criteria for 'prolonged prescribing' as defined by the proposed measure, 3.7% of THA patients and 12.1% of TKA patients were still receiving opioids. With a better understanding of how specific clinician group post-operative prescribing practices compare with their peers and incorporating monetary incentives through the MIPS participation pathway of the Quality