A cross-cultural study of the Montreal Cognitive Assessment for people with hearing impairment

Cognitive screening tools enable the detection of cognitive impairment, facilitate timely intervention, inform clinical care, and allow long-term planning. The Montreal Cognitive Assessment for people with hearing impairment (MoCA-H) was developed as a reliable cognitive screening tool for people wi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of the American Geriatrics Society (JAGS) 2024-10, Vol.72 (10), p.3156-3162
Hauptverfasser: Theocharous, Stacey, Savage, Greg, Charalambous, Anna Pavlina, Côté, Mathieu, David, Renaud, Gallant, Kathleen, Helmer, Catherine, Laforce, Robert, Leroi, Iracema, Martins, Ralph N, Nasreddine, Ziad, Politis, Antonis, Reeves, David, Russell, Gregor, Sirois, Marie-Josée, Sohrabi, Hamid R, Thodi, Chyrssoula, Völter, Christiane, Yeung, Wai Kent, Dawes, Piers
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Cognitive screening tools enable the detection of cognitive impairment, facilitate timely intervention, inform clinical care, and allow long-term planning. The Montreal Cognitive Assessment for people with hearing impairment (MoCA-H) was developed as a reliable cognitive screening tool for people with hearing loss. Using the same methodology across four languages, this study examined whether cultural or linguistic factors affect the performance of the MoCA-H. The current study investigated the performance of the MoCA-H across English, German, French, and Greek language groups (n = 385) controlling for demographic factors known to affect the performance of the MoCA-H. In a multiple regression model accounting for age, sex, and education, cultural-linguistic group accounted for 6.89% of variance in the total MoCA-H score. Differences between languages in mean score of up to 2.6 points were observed. Cultural or linguistic factors have a clinically significant impact on the performance of the MoCA-H such that optimal performance cut points for identification of cognitive impairment derived in English-speaking populations are likely inappropriate for use in non-English speaking populations. To ensure reliable identification of cognitive impairment, it is essential that locally appropriate performance cut points are established for each translation of the MoCA-H.
ISSN:0002-8614
1532-5415
1532-5415
DOI:10.1111/jgs.19020