1. The assessment of cognition in visually impaired older adults
- Author
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Killen, Alison, Firbank, Michael J., Collerton, Daniel, Clarke, Michael, Jefferis, Joanna Mary, Taylor, John-Paul, McKeith, Ian G., Mosimann, Urs Peter, Killen, Alison, Firbank, Michael J., Collerton, Daniel, Clarke, Michael, Jefferis, Joanna Mary, Taylor, John-Paul, McKeith, Ian G., and Mosimann, Urs Peter
- Abstract
Background: visual and cognitive impairments are common in later life. Yet there are very few cognitive screening tests for the visually impaired. Objective: to screen for cognitive impairment in the visually impaired. Methods: case-control study including 150 elderly participants with visual impairment (n=74) and a control group without visual impairment (n=76) using vision-independent cognitive tests and cognitive screening tests (MMSE and clock drawing tests (CDT)) which are in part vision dependent. Results: the scoring of the two groups did not differ in the vision-independent cognitive tests. Visually impaired patients performed poorer than controls in the vision-dependent items of the MMSE (T=7.3; df: 148; P<0.001) and in CDT (T=3.1; df: 145; P=0.003). No group difference was found when vision-independent items were added to MMSE and CDT. The test score gain by the use of vision-independent items correlated with the severity of visual impairment (P<0.002). Conclusion: visually impaired patients benefit from cognitive tests, which do not rely on vision. The more visually impaired the greater the benefit
- Published
- 2017