老年初级保健患者自我管理的轻度认知障碍计算机评估的可行性和有效性。

Mary C Tierney, Gary Naglie, Ross Upshur, Rahim Moineddin, Jocelyn Charles, R Liisa Jaakkimainen
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引用次数: 32

摘要

我们调查了一项有效的计算机化认知测试,轻度认知障碍计算机化评估(CAMCI),是否可以由老年初级保健患者独立完成。我们还根据独立的神经心理学参考标准确定了CAMCI轻度认知障碍全球风险评分的最佳截止值。所有符合条件的65岁及以上患者,由13名初级保健医生组成的1个家庭诊所连续治疗2个月以上。被诊断为痴呆或有痴呆病史的患者被排除在外。初级保健医生表明他们、患者或家属是否对每位患者的认知有顾虑。共有130名有认知问题的患者和133名没有认知问题的匹配样本被纳入研究。在指示独立工作后,单独使用CAMCI。评论被逐字记录。共有259人(98.5%)完成了整个CAMCI。241人(91.6%)在没有提问或简单回答问题的情况下完成了测试。缺乏电脑操作经验是唯一降低独立CAMCI完成几率的患者特征。鉴于各个年龄段的人对计算机的依赖日益增加,这些结果支持了对老年初级保健患者使用自我管理的计算机认知测试的可行性。最佳临界值的敏感性为80%,特异性为74%。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Feasibility and validity of the self-administered computerized assessment of mild cognitive impairment with older primary care patients.

We investigated whether a validated computerized cognitive test, the Computerized Assessment of Mild Cognitive Impairment (CAMCI), could be independently completed by older primary care patients. We also determined the optimal cut-off for the CAMCI global risk score for mild cognitive impairment against an independent neuropsychological reference standard. All eligible patients aged 65 years and older, seen consecutively over 2 months by 1 family practice of 13 primary care physicians, were invited to participate. Patients with a diagnosis or previous work-up for dementia were excluded. Primary care physicians indicated whether they, the patient, or family had concerns about each patient's cognition. A total of 130 patients with cognitive concerns and a matched sample of 133 without cognitive concerns were enrolled. The CAMCI was individually administered after instructions to work independently. Comments were recorded verbatim. A total of 259 (98.5%) completed the entire CAMCI. Two hundred and forty-one (91.6%) completed it without any questions or after simple acknowledgment of their question. Lack of computer experience was the only patient characteristic that decreased the odds of independent CAMCI completion. These results support the feasibility of using self-administered computerized cognitive tests with older primary care patients, given the increasing reliance on computers by people of all ages. The optimal cut-off score had a sensitivity of 80% and specificity of 74%.

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