School of Psychology,University of Sydney,Sydney,NSW,Australia.
Neuroscience Research Australia,Sydney,NSW,Australia.
Int Psychogeriatr. 2018 Apr;30(4):519-526. doi: 10.1017/S104161021700179X. Epub 2017 Nov 17.
ABSTRACTBackground:Years of education is the most commonly used proxy measure of cognitive reserve. Other forms of cognitive stimulation in childhood may provide similar protection against cognitive decline, particularly in Indigenous groups, where education may have been lacking in quality or quantity. The Retrospective Indigenous Childhood Enrichment (RICE) scale was developed to measure non-school-based activities and environmental stimulation during childhood that are likely to have enhanced cognitive reserve. The aim of the study was to assess the validity and reliability of the RICE scale with a group of older Aboriginal Australians.
294 Aboriginal Australian people (60-92 years), living in urban or regional areas of NSW, completed the RICE scale as part of a longer face-to-face interview. Additional data was collected on their formal education, childhood environment, and childhood trauma (Study 1). Test-retest, inter-method and inter-rater reliability were assessed in a convenience sample of a further 38 participants by re-administration of the RICE scale at two time points, approximately 14 days apart (M = 14.11, SD = 6.78) (Study 2).
Factor analyses reduced the scale from 21 items to 18 and identified three factors: (1) Traditional, (2) Intellectual, and (3) Community. Higher scores on the RICE scale were related to higher years of formal education and lower scores on a childhood trauma questionnaire. The RICE scale had good internal consistency (Cronbach's α 0.79), and excellent test-retest reliability (ICC = 0.95, 95% CI 0.90-0.97) and inter-rater reliability (0.99, CI 95% 0.997-0.999).
The RICE is, to our knowledge, the first standardized measure that assesses the level of childhood environmental stimulation in older Aboriginal Australians. This could provide an important supplementary measure, in addition to formal education, to investigate cognitive reserve and dementia risk in this population and enhance understanding of the links between childhood experiences and late-life cognitive decline.
摘要
受教育年限是最常用的认知储备代理指标。儿童时期的其他形式的认知刺激也可能提供类似的保护,防止认知能力下降,特别是在教育质量或数量可能不足的土著群体中。回顾性土著儿童充实(RICE)量表是为了衡量儿童时期可能增强认知储备的非学校活动和环境刺激。该研究的目的是用一组老年澳大利亚土著人评估 RICE 量表的有效性和可靠性。
294 名居住在新南威尔士州城市或地区的澳大利亚土著人(60-92 岁)完成了 RICE 量表,作为更全面的面对面访谈的一部分。在研究 1 中,还收集了他们的正规教育、童年环境和童年创伤的额外数据。在另一个方便的样本中,通过在大约 14 天的时间内两次重新进行 RICE 量表的测试(M = 14.11,SD = 6.78),评估了测试-重测、方法间和评分者间的可靠性(研究 2)。
因素分析将量表从 21 项减少到 18 项,并确定了三个因素:(1)传统,(2)智力,和(3)社区。RICE 量表得分较高与正规教育年限较高和儿童创伤问卷得分较低有关。RICE 量表具有良好的内部一致性(Cronbach's α 0.79),测试-重测信度极好(ICC = 0.95,95%CI 0.90-0.97)和评分者间信度(0.99,CI 95% 0.997-0.999)。
据我们所知,RICE 是第一个评估老年澳大利亚土著人儿童时期环境刺激水平的标准化量表。这可能是一种重要的补充衡量标准,除了正规教育之外,还可以调查该人群的认知储备和痴呆风险,并增强对童年经历与晚年认知能力下降之间联系的理解。