Background
Early detection of cognitive impairment is a goal of high-quality geriatric medical care, but new approaches are needed to
reduce rates of missed cases.
Objective
To evaluate whether adding routine cognitive screening to primary care visits for older adults increases rates of dementia
diagnosis, specialist referral, or prescribing of antidementia medications.
Setting
Four primary care clinics in a university-affiliated primary care network.
Design
A quality improvement screening project and quasiexperimental comparison of 2 intervention clinics and 2 control clinics.
The Mini-Cog was administered by medical assistants to intervention clinic patients aged 65+ years. Rates of dementia diagnoses,
referrals, and medication prescribing were tracked over time using computerized administrative data.
Results
Twenty-six medical assistants successfully screened 70% (n = 524) of all eligible patients who made at least 1 clinic visit during the intervention period; 18% screened positive. There
were no complaints about workflow interruption. Relative to baseline rates and control clinics, Mini-Cog screening was associated
with increased dementia diagnoses, specialist referrals, and prescribing of cognitive enhancing medications. Patients without
previous dementia indicators who had a positive Mini-Cog were more likely than all other patients to receive a new dementia
diagnosis, specialty referral, or cognitive enhancing medication. However, relevant physician action occurred in only 17%
of screen-positive patients. Responses were most related to the lowest Mini-Cog score level (0/5) and advanced age.
Conclusion
Mini-Cog screening by office staff is feasible in primary care practice and has measurable effects on physician behavior.
However, new physician action relevant to dementia was likely to occur only when impairment was severe, and additional efforts
are needed to help primary care physicians follow up appropriately on information suggesting cognitive impairment in older
patients.
KEY WORDS Mini-Cog - practice intervention - primary care - dementia screening - clinic intervention
An erratum to this article can be found at
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11606-007-0242-0