Scharre Douglas W, Chang Shu Ing, Nagaraja Haikady N, Yager-Schweller Jennifer, Murden Robert A
Division of Cognitive Neurology (DWS), Dept. of Neurology (DWS, S-IC), College of Public Health (HN) and College of Medicine (JY-S), and Department of Internal Medicine (RAM), The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center, Columbus, OH.
J Neuropsychiatry Clin Neurosci. 2014 Fall;26(4):369-75. doi: 10.1176/appi.neuropsych.13060145.
This study investigated the functionality of the Self-Administered Gerocognitive Examination (SAGE) for cognitive screening in community settings and examined its characteristics as a cognitive screening assessment tool. From 45 community events, 1,047 individuals over age 50 were screened with SAGE. Cognitive impairment was identified in 28%. Principal-component and correlation analysis indicate that SAGE is an internally-consistent test that is very well balanced, with language, cognition, visuospatial, executive, and memory domains. Community cognitive screening using SAGE was found to be feasible and efficient in diverse settings with both small and large groups.
本研究调查了自我管理老年认知检查(SAGE)在社区环境中进行认知筛查的功能,并检验了其作为一种认知筛查评估工具的特征。在45次社区活动中,对1047名50岁以上的个体进行了SAGE筛查。发现28%的个体存在认知障碍。主成分分析和相关性分析表明,SAGE是一项内部一致性良好、各方面非常均衡的测试,涵盖语言、认知、视觉空间、执行和记忆领域。研究发现,在不同规模群体的各种环境中,使用SAGE进行社区认知筛查是可行且有效的。