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Validation of a cognitive assessment battery administered over the telephone

Authors

Rapp, Stephen R., Legault, Claudine, Espeland, Mark A., Resnick, Susan M., Hogan, Patricia E., Coker, Laura H., Dailey, Maggie, Shumaker, Sally A.

Journal

Journal Of The American Geriatrics Society, Volume: 60, No.: 9, Pages.: 1616-1623

Year of Publication

2012

Abstract

Objectives: To evaluate the validity and reliability of a cognitive test battery and questionnaires administered by telephone.; Design: Observational study; 110 participants randomly assigned to receive two administrations of the same cognitive test battery 6 months apart in one of four combinations (Time 1 administration/Time 2 administration): telephone/telephone, telephone/face to face, face to face/telephone, face to face/face to face.; Setting: Academic medical center.; Participants: One hundred ten women aged 65 to 90 without dementia.; Measurements: The battery included tests of attention; verbal learning and memory; verbal fluency; executive function; working memory; global cognitive functioning; and self-reported measures of perceived memory problems, depressive symptoms, sleep disturbance, and health-related quality of life. Test-retest reliability, concurrent validity, relative bias associated with telephone administration, and change scores were evaluated.; Results: There were no statistically significant differences in scores on any of the cognitive tests or questionnaires between participants randomly assigned to telephone or face-to-face administration at the Time 1 assessment, indicating equivalence across administration modes. There was no significant bias for tests or questionnaires administered by telephone (P’s > .01), nor was there a difference in mean change scores between administration modes except for Category Fluency (P = .01) and California Verbal Learning Test long-delay free recall (P = .004). Mean test-retest coefficients for the battery were not significantly different between groups, although individual test-retest correlation coefficients were generally higher within modes than between modes.; Conclusion: Telephone administration of cognitive tests and questionnaires to older women is reliable and valid. Use of telephone batteries can substantially reduce the cost and burden of cognitive assessments and increase enrollment, retention, and data completeness, thereby improving study validity.; © 2012, Copyright the Authors Journal compilation © 2012, The American Geriatrics Society.

Bibtex Citation

@article{Rapp_2012, doi = {10.1111/j.1532-5415.2012.04111.x}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1532-5415.2012.04111.x}, year = 2012, month = {sep}, publisher = {Wiley-Blackwell}, volume = {60}, number = {9}, pages = {1616--1623}, author = {Stephen R. Rapp and Claudine Legault and Mark A. Espeland and Susan M. Resnick and Patricia E. Hogan and Laura H. Coker and Maggie Dailey and Sally A. Shumaker}, title = {Validation of a Cognitive Assessment Battery Administered over the Telephone}, journal = {Journal of the American Geriatrics Society} }

Keywords

aged, aged, 80 and over, cognition disorders, diagnosis, female, humans, linear models, neuropsychological tests, north carolina, prospective studies, psychology, psychometrics, reproducibility of results, telephone

Countries of Study

USA

Types of Dementia

Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI)

Types of Study

Randomised Controlled Trial

Type of Outcomes

Cognition

Settings

Community

Type of Interventions

Diagnostic Target Identification

Diagnostic Targets

Cognition testing (inc. task driven tests such as clock drawing)