Yates Coley, PhD

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“Learning health systems promise to improve medical decision-making in the era of big data by making up-to-date analyses of patient information and scientific knowledge available to physicians and patients in real time.”

Yates Coley, PhD

Associate Biostatistics Investigator, Kaiser Permanente Washington Health Research Institute
Affiliate Assistant Professor, Department of Biostatistics, University of Washington

Biography

Yates Coley, PhD, is a biostatistician whose research promotes predictive analytics and learning health systems as a way to improve value quality, and equity in health care delivery. Their statistical research focuses on developing clinical prediction models that are accurate, actionable, and fair. This work spans several statistical domains including repeated measurements, missing data, and machine learning.

Dr. Coley’s paper examining racial and ethnic inequity in two suicide prediction models was awarded Paper of the Year at the Healthcare Systems Research Network 2021 Annual Conference. The two models performed well for visits by patients who were White, Hispanic, and Asian but did not accurately identify high-risk visits for patients who were Black, American Indian, and Alaskan Native, likely due to persistent structural barriers limiting access to affordable, high-quality, and culturally competent mental health care. The study emphasized the importance of assessing performance within racial and ethnic subgroups of all prediction models before clinical implementation to ensure that prediction models ameliorate, rather than exacerbate, existing health disparities.

Dr. Coley is a graduate of  the CATALyST K12 Washington Learning Health System Program funded by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality and the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute. As part of their training in learning health system research, Dr. Coley studied current barriers to implementing evidence-based predictive analytics tools to help develop prediction tools that can be deployed and sustained in clinical care. Their research plan also focused on statistical methods to address racial bias in clinical prediction algorithms.     

Before starting as an assistant investigator at Kaiser Permanente Washington Health Research Institute (KPWHRI) in 2016, Dr. Coley was a postdoctoral research fellow at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. There, they worked with urologists to develop a prediction model that enables personalized management of low-risk prostate cancer.

Dr. Coley completed their PhD in biostatistics at the University of Washington. Their dissertation research proposed methods to improve effectiveness estimates in HIV prevention trials by accounting for unobserved variability in risk.

At KPWHRI, Dr. Coley collaborates on projects across a range of research areas including mental health, breast cancer imaging, aging, and health services. They also lead predictive analytics work and direct biostatistical support for KPWHRI’s Center for Accelerating Care Transformation.

Research interests and experience

  • Biostatistics

    Bayesian analysis, causal inference, data visualization, hierarchical models, longitudinal data analysis, missing data, prediction, survival analysis

  • Mental Health

    Suicide risk, depression treatment, measurement-based care, antipsychotic use in adolescents

  • Cancer

    Biostatistics, prostate cancer, risk stratification, stakeholder engagement, surveillance

  • Health Informatics

    Biostatistics, data visualization, interactive decision-support tools, learning health systems, stakeholder engagement

  • Health Services & Economics

    Biostatistics, clinical decision-support, learning health systems, patient-centeredness, shared decision-making, stakeholder engagement

Recent publications

Sprague BL, Coley RY, Lowry KP, Kerlikowske K, Henderson LM, Su YR, Lee CI, Onega T, Bowles EJA, Herschorn SD, diFlorio-Alexander RM, Miglioretti DL. Digital breast tomosynthesis versus digital mammography screening performance on successive screening rounds from the Breast Cancer Surveillance Consortium. Radiology. 2023;307(5):e223142. doi: 10.1148/radiol.223142.  PubMed

Harry ML, Sanchez K, Ahmedani BK, Beck AL, Coleman KJ, Coley RY, Daida YG, Lynch FL, Rossom RC, Waring SC, Simon GE. Assessing the differential item functioning of PHQ-9 items for diverse racial and ethnic adults with mental health and/or substance use disorder diagnoses: A retrospective cohort study. J Affect Disord. 2023 Oct 1;338:402-413. doi: 10.1016/j.jad.2023.04.091. Epub 2023 Apr 29. PubMed

Shortreed SM, Walker RL, Johnson E, Wellman R, Cruz M, Ziebell R, Coley RY, Yaseen ZS, Dharmarajan S, Penfold RB, Ahmedani BK, Rossom RC, Beck A, Boggs JM, Simon GE. Complex modeling with detailed temporal predictors does not improve health records-based suicide risk prediction.  NPJ Digit Med. 2023;6(1):47. doi: 10.1038/s41746-023-00772-4.  PubMed

Coley RY, Liao Q, Simon N, Shortreed SM. Empirical evaluation of internal validation methods for prediction in large-scale clinical data with rare-event outcomes: A case study in suicide risk prediction. BMC Med Res Methodol. 2023 Feb 1;23(1):33. doi: 10.1186/s12874-023-01844-5. PubMed

Richards JE, Yarborough BJH, Holden E, Shulman L, Stumbo SP, Coley Y, Simon GE. Implementation of suicide risk estimation analytics to support mental health care for quality improvement.  JAMA Netw Open. 2022 Dec 1;5(12):e2247195. doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2022.47195. PubMed

 

News

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When is Paxlovid right for COVID-19 treatment?

New risk model uses advanced analytics to guide informed treatment decisions at Kaiser Permanente Washington.

Healthy findings blog

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What motivates Yates Coley’s work on prediction models?

Their work contributes to improved quality of care and better understanding of patients’ needs.

Research

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Some adolescents are more likely to use patient portal than others

A new study aims to understand trends in digital care communication among teens.

KPWHRI in the media

Informed use of machine learning tools

AI tools in hematology: With thorough assessment, ‘informed decisions’ are possible

Healio, Dec. 12, 2023