Background/Objectives: Postoperative pulmonary complications (PPCs) following abdominal surgery are associated with prolonged hospitalization, delayed recovery, and increased mortality. Because nursing surveillance is essential for early detection and timely intervention, this study aimed to develop a holistic nursing surveillance decision support system integrating PPC risk prediction with structured nursing action recommendations. Methods: In this retrospective cohort study, electronic medical record (EMR) data from approximately 6900 adult patients who underwent abdominal surgery at a single institution between January 2015 and September 2023 were analyzed. The study protocol was approved by the Institutional Review Board, and the requirement for informed consent was waived because of the retrospective study design. PPC risk was predicted using a tabular multilayer perceptron (MLP) encoder with SHapley Additive exPlanations (SHAP)-based feature weighting and a random forest classification head optimized via Optuna. Class imbalance was addressed using weighted sampling, class weighting in BCE(Binary Cross Entropy) With Logits Loss, and decision-threshold optimization. For clinical decision support, a large language model generated structured nursing surveillance recommendations in an action–evidence–rationale JSON format and was aligned through supervised fine-tuning (SFT) using human-evaluated cases. Results: The prediction model achieved an AUROC of 0.810, with an accuracy of 0.811, precision of 0.547, and recall of 0.545. In expert evaluation, the SFT-aligned model improved recommendation quality, reducing incorrect nursing actions from 19.3% to 8.0%. Conclusions: The proposed system demonstrates the feasibility of an end-to-end nursing surveillance decision support framework linking PPC risk prediction with structured clinical recommendations. The findings suggest its potential to support more accurate risk prediction and more actionable nursing surveillance for patients undergoing abdominal surgery.
Kim et al. (Sat,) studied this question.