Litcius/Paper detail

The COVID-19 pandemic altered the modality, but not the frequency, of formal cognitive assessment

Sam S. Webb, Eirini Kontou, Nele Demeyere

2021Disability and Rehabilitation21 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

PURPOSE: We investigated the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on the modality of formal cognitive assessments (in-person versus remote assessments). MATERIALS AND METHODS: video or telephone conferencing, both pre- and post-March 2020. Further, we asked respondents about the assessment tools used and perceived barriers, challenges, and facilitators for the remote assessment of cognition. In addition, we asked questions specifically about the use of the Oxford Cognitive Screen. RESULTS: We found that the frequency of assessing cognition was stable compared to pre-pandemic levels. Use of telephone and video conferencing cognitive assessments increased by 10% and 18% respectively. Remote assessment increased accessibility to participants and safety but made observing the subtleties of behaviour during test administration difficult. The respondents called for an increase in the availability of standardised, validated, and normed assessments. CONCLUSIONS: We conclude that the pandemic has not been detrimental to the frequency of cognitive assessments. In addition, a shift in clinical practice to include remote cognitive assessments is clear and wider availability of validated and standardised remote assessments is necessary.IMPLICATIONS FOR REHABILITATIONWe caution the wider use and interpretation of remote formal cognitive assessments due to lack of validated, standardised, and normed assessments in a remote format.Clinicians should seek out the latest validation and normative data papers to ensure they are using the most up to date tests and respective cut offs.Support is needed for individuals who lack knowledge/have anxiety over the use of technology in formal cognitive assessments.

Topics & Concepts

CognitionNormativePsychologyModality (human–computer interaction)Cognitive testPandemicCognitive Assessment SystemApplied psychologyMedicineCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)Computer scienceCognitive impairmentHuman–computer interactionPhilosophyEpistemologyNeuroscienceDiseaseInfectious disease (medical specialty)PathologyTraumatic Brain Injury ResearchCognitive Functions and MemoryDementia and Cognitive Impairment Research