4.7 Article

Cognitive Change Among Nursing Home Residents: CogRisk-NH Scale Development to Predict Decline

Journal

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.jamda.2023.06.011

Keywords

Cognitive Performance Scale; CPS; cognitive decline; older adults; nursing homes; long term care facilities; interRAI; dementia; cognitive impairment

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This study examined cognitive changes among nursing home residents and developed a risk model for predicting cognitive decline. The results showed that residents with milder impairment had higher rates of cognitive decline, and the CogRisk-NH scale was able to predict the risk of cognitive decline.
Objectives: Examine cognitive changes over time among nursing home residents and develop a risk model for identifying predictors of cognitive decline. Design: Using secondary analysis design with Minimum Data Set data, cognitive status was based on the Cognitive Performance Scale (CPS).Setting and Participants: Baseline and 7 quarterly follow-up analyses of US and Canadian interRAI data (N = 1,257,832) were completed. Methods: Logistic regression analyses identified predictors of decline to form the CogRisk-NH scale.Results: At baseline, about 15% of residents were cognitively intact (CPS = 0), and 11.2% borderline intact (CPS = 1). The remaining more intact, with mild impairment (CPS = 2), included 15.0%. Approximately 59% residents fell into CPS categories 3 to 6 (moderate to severe impairment). Over time, increasing proportions of residents declined: 17.1% at 6 months, 21.6% at 9 months, and 34.0% at 21 months. Baseline CPS score was a strong predictor of decline. Categories 0 to 2 had 3-month decline rates in midteens, and categories 3 to 5 had an average decline rate about 9%. Consequently, a 2-submodel construction was employeddone for CPS categories 0 to 2 and the other for categories 3 to 5. Both models were integrated into a 6-category risk scale (CogRisk-NH). CogRisk-NH scale score distribution had 15.9% in category 1, 26.84% in category 2, and 36.7% in category 3. Three higher-risk categories (ie, 4-6) represented 20.6% of residents. Mean decline rates at the 3-month assessment ranged from 4.4% to 28.3%. Over time, differentiation among risk categories continued: 6.9% to 38.4.% at 6 months, 11.0% to 51.0% at 1 year, and 16.2% to 61.4% at 21 months, providing internal validation of the prediction model.Conclusions and Implications: Cognitive decline rates were higher among residents in less-impaired CPS categories. CogRisk-NH scale differentiates those with low likelihood of decline from those with mod-

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