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Identifying Appropriate Neuropsychological Tests for Uneducated/Illiterate Older Individuals

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Auteur
Mandyla M.-A., Yannakoulia M., Hadjigeorgiou G., Dardiotis E., Scarmeas N., Kosmidis M.H.
Date
2021
Language
en
DOI
10.1017/S1355617721001016
Sujet
aged
dementia
educational status
female
human
literacy
memory
neuropsychological test
physiology
Aged
Dementia
Educational Status
Female
Humans
Literacy
Memory
Neuropsychological Tests
Cambridge University Press
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Résumé
Objectives: We investigated the utility of traditional neuropsychological tests in older uneducated/illiterate individuals without dementia to determine the possibility that they are likely not appropriate for this group. Methods: We assessed the neuropsychological performance of 1122 older adults [≥65 years old; mean age: 74.03 (SD = 5.46); mean education: 4.76 (SD = 2.5) years; women: n = 714], in the context of the Hellenic Longitudinal Investigation of Aging and Diet (HELIAD), a population-based study conducted in Greece. Results: We based our analyses on three groups: high-functioning/cognitively healthy (i.e., without dementia) uneducated/illiterate individuals (n = 80), high-functioning/cognitively healthy educated/literate individuals (n = 932), and low-functioning/cognitively impaired educated/literate individuals (presumably with dementia; n = 110). We used binary regression analyses with Bonferroni correction to investigate whether test performance differentiated uneducated/illiterate from educated/literate individuals. Models were adjusted for age and sex; raw test scores were the predictor variables. The uneducated/illiterate cohort was at a disadvantage relative to the healthy educated/literate group on all variables but verbal memory recognition and consolidation, congruent motor responses, and phonological fluency clustering (p >.002). Moreover, only word list learning immediate and delayed free recall and delayed cued recall differentiated the high-functioning/cognitively healthy uneducated/illiterate from the low-functioning/cognitively impaired educated/literate group, favoring the former (p's <.002). Conclusions: Our findings suggest that only particular verbal memory test variables are fair in determining whether older uneducated/illiterate individuals have functional/cognitive impairment suggestive of a neurodegenerative process. On all other neuropsychological variables, this cohort was at a disadvantage. Therefore, we highlight the need for identifying appropriate methods of assessment for older uneducated/illiterate individuals. Copyright © INS. Published by Cambridge University Press, 2021.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/11615/76260
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