Department of Medicine, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.
Division of Geriatric Medicine, The Ottawa Hospital, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.
J Am Geriatr Soc. 2020 Oct;68(10):2207-2213. doi: 10.1111/jgs.16713. Epub 2020 Jul 28.
Every year, millions of patients worldwide undergo cognitive testing. Unfortunately, new barriers to the use of free open access cognitive screening tools have arisen over time, making accessibility of tools unstable. This article is in follow-up to an editorial discussing alternative cognitive screening tools for those who cannot afford the costs of the Mini-Mental State Examination and Montreal Cognitive Assessment (see www.dementiascreen.ca). The current article outlines an emerging disruptive "free-to-fee" cycle where free open access cognitive screening tools are integrated into clinical practice and guidelines, where fees are then levied for the use of the tools, resulting in clinicians moving on to other tools. This article provides recommendations on means to break this cycle, including the development of tool kits of valid cognitive screening tools that authors have contracted not to charge for (i.e., have agreed to keep free open access). The PRACTICAL.1 Criteria (PRACTIcing Clinician Accessibility and Logistical Criteria Version 1) are introduced to help clinicians select from validated cognitive screening tools, considering barriers and facilitators, such as whether the cognitive screening tools are easy to score and free of cost. It is suggested that future systematic reviews embed the PRACTICAL.1 criteria, or refined future versions, as part of the standard of review. Methodological issues, the need for open access training to insure proper use of cognitive screening tools, and the need to anticipate growing ethnolinguistic diversity by developing tools that are less sensitive to educational, cultural, and linguistic bias are discussed in this opinion piece. J Am Geriatr Soc 68:2207-2213, 2020.
每年,全球有数百万患者接受认知测试。不幸的是,随着时间的推移,新的障碍出现了,使得免费开放获取的认知筛查工具的使用变得不稳定。本文是对一篇社论的后续报道,该社论讨论了那些无法承担 Mini-Mental State Examination 和 Montreal Cognitive Assessment 费用的人可以选择的替代认知筛查工具(见 www.dementiascreen.ca)。本文概述了一种新出现的破坏性“免费到收费”循环,即免费开放获取的认知筛查工具被整合到临床实践和指南中,然后对工具的使用收取费用,导致临床医生转而使用其他工具。本文提供了打破这一循环的建议,包括开发一套作者不收费的有效认知筛查工具工具包(即同意保持免费开放获取)。介绍了 PRACTICAL.1 标准(PRACTIcing Clinician Accessibility and Logistical Criteria Version 1),以帮助临床医生在考虑到障碍和促进因素的情况下,从经过验证的认知筛查工具中进行选择,例如认知筛查工具是否易于评分且免费。建议未来的系统评价将 PRACTICAL.1 标准或未来的精炼版本作为审查标准的一部分嵌入其中。本文还讨论了方法学问题、开放获取培训以确保认知筛查工具正确使用的必要性,以及通过开发对教育、文化和语言偏见不太敏感的工具来预测不断增长的民族语言多样性的必要性。J Am Geriatr Soc 68:2207-2213, 2020.