Borson Soo, Scanlan James, Hummel Jeffrey, Gibbs Kathy, Lessig Mary, Zuhr Elizabeth
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, University of Washington, 1959 NE Pacific Street, Campus Box 356560, Seattle, WA 98195, USA.
J Gen Intern Med. 2007 Jun;22(6):811-7. doi: 10.1007/s11606-007-0202-8. Epub 2007 Apr 20.
Early detection of cognitive impairment is a goal of high-quality geriatric medical care, but new approaches are needed to reduce rates of missed cases.
To evaluate whether adding routine cognitive screening to primary care visits for older adults increases rates of dementia diagnosis, specialist referral, or prescribing of antidementia medications.
Four primary care clinics in a university-affiliated primary care network.
A quality improvement screening project and quasiexperimental comparison of 2 intervention clinics and 2 control clinics. The Mini-Cog was administered by medical assistants to intervention clinic patients aged 65+ years. Rates of dementia diagnoses, referrals, and medication prescribing were tracked over time using computerized administrative data.
Twenty-six medical assistants successfully screened 70% (n = 524) of all eligible patients who made at least 1 clinic visit during the intervention period; 18% screened positive. There were no complaints about workflow interruption. Relative to baseline rates and control clinics, Mini-Cog screening was associated with increased dementia diagnoses, specialist referrals, and prescribing of cognitive enhancing medications. Patients without previous dementia indicators who had a positive Mini-Cog were more likely than all other patients to receive a new dementia diagnosis, specialty referral, or cognitive enhancing medication. However, relevant physician action occurred in only 17% of screen-positive patients. Responses were most related to the lowest Mini-Cog score level (0/5) and advanced age.
Mini-Cog screening by office staff is feasible in primary care practice and has measurable effects on physician behavior. However, new physician action relevant to dementia was likely to occur only when impairment was severe, and additional efforts are needed to help primary care physicians follow up appropriately on information suggesting cognitive impairment in older patients.
早期发现认知障碍是高质量老年医学护理的目标,但需要新方法来降低漏诊率。
评估在老年人初级保健就诊时增加常规认知筛查是否会提高痴呆症诊断率、专科转诊率或抗痴呆药物处方率。
大学附属初级保健网络中的四家初级保健诊所。
一项质量改进筛查项目以及对两家干预诊所和两家对照诊所进行的准实验比较。由医疗助理对干预诊所中65岁及以上的患者进行简易认知筛查量表(Mini-Cog)测试。使用计算机化管理数据随时间跟踪痴呆症诊断、转诊和药物处方率。
26名医疗助理成功筛查了干预期间至少就诊1次的所有 eligible 患者中的70%(n = 524);18%筛查呈阳性。没有关于工作流程中断的投诉。与基线率和对照诊所相比,Mini-Cog筛查与痴呆症诊断增加、专科转诊以及认知增强药物处方增加相关。Mini-Cog呈阳性但之前没有痴呆症指标的患者比所有其他患者更有可能接受新的痴呆症诊断、专科转诊或认知增强药物治疗。然而,在筛查呈阳性的患者中,只有17%的患者有相关医生采取行动。反应最常与最低的Mini-Cog分数水平(0/5)和高龄有关。
办公室工作人员进行Mini-Cog筛查在初级保健实践中是可行的,并且对医生行为有可衡量的影响。然而,只有当损伤严重时才可能出现与痴呆症相关的新医生行动,并且需要额外努力来帮助初级保健医生对提示老年患者认知障碍的信息进行适当随访。