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Validity of a screening tool for detecting subtle cognitive impairment in the middle-aged and elderly

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 16:56 authored by Kathryn Bruce, Stephen RobinsonStephen Robinson, Julian Smith, Greg Yelland
The present study tested 121 middle-aged and elderly community-dwelling individuals on the computer-based Subtle Cognitive Impairment Test (SCIT) and compared their performance with that on several neuropsychological tests. The SCIT had excellent internal consistency, as demonstrated by a high split-half reliability measure (0.88-0.93). Performance on the SCIT was unaffected by the confounding factors of sex, education level, and mood state. Many participants demonstrated impaired performance on one or more of the neuropsychological tests (Controlled Oral Word Association Task, Rey Auditory and Verbal Learning Task, Grooved Pegboard [GP], Complex Figures). Performance on SCIT subtests correlated significantly with performance on many of the neuropsychological subtests, and the best and worst performing quartiles on the SCIT subtest discriminated between good and poor performers on other subtests, collectively indicating concurrent validity of the SCIT. Principal components analysis indicated that SCIT performance does not cluster with performance on most of the other cognitive tests, and instead is associated with decision-making efficacy, and processing speed and efficiency. Thus, the SCIT is responsive to the processes that underpin multiple cognitive domains, rather than being specific for a single domain. Since the SCIT is quick and easy to administer, and is well tolerated by the elderly, it may have utility as a screening tool for detecting cognitive impairment in middle-aged and elderly populations.

History

Related Materials

  1. 1.
    DOI - Is published in 10.2147/CIA.S68363
  2. 2.
    ISSN - Is published in 11769092

Journal

Clinical Interventions in Aging

Volume

9

Start page

2165

End page

2176

Total pages

12

Publisher

Dove Medical Press

Place published

New Zealand

Language

English

Copyright

© 2014 Bruce et al.

Former Identifier

2006051254

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2015-04-20

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