Primary Care Detection of Cognitive Impairment Leveraging Health & Consumer Technologies in Underserved Communities: The MyCog Trial
Dementia, Cognitive Impairment, Cognitive Decline
About this trial
This is an interventional diagnostic trial for Dementia focused on measuring Detect, Manage
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria: been seen by an Oak Street healthcare provider affiliated with one of the 24 enrolled practices had at least one clinic visit (routine or Annual Wellness Visit) during the 3-year study period not been diagnosed previously with cognitive deficits, impairments or dementias. Exclusion Criteria: Children, adolescence, and younger adults are excluded as cognitive impairment in these populations is often due to differences other than age-related changes.
Sites / Locations
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Experimental
No Intervention
MyCog Paradigm
Usual Care Arm
The MyCog paradigm establishes a protocol for implementing our self-administered assessment in the clinic whenever a patient or involved family member reports a concern. The MyCog test can be completed either in the exam room or the waiting room. The MyCog app, on an iPad, can be readily linked to the electronic health record, so once the two tests are completed, results are securely transmitted and will populate within discrete, fields that can be queried found in the patient record; specifically: 1) in a screening tab, under 'cognitive abilities', 2) a flow sheet to capture trend with future repeated tests - informing physicians of a patient's relative vs. normative cognitive decline. Both a binary, objective classification of 'impairment detected or suspected' or 'no impairment detected' will populate in the record, as well as a summary score to further guide the clinician by clarifying the extent to which a patient's performance falls outside a normal threshold.
At Oak Street Health, cognitive assessments included when concerns are reported by patients or family members, if a clinician suspects a concern, or during Annual Wellness Visits (AWVs) are limited to the Mini-Cog©, and are variably administered, particularly outside of AWVs. Oak Street practices vary by clinician in terms of making referrals, how results are documented, what diagnosis code, placement in problem list or visit diagnosis, and any follow-up plans. While we will not make any explicit recommendations to usual care practices regarding their use of a cognitive assessment, we will ensure that 1) any chosen test is linked to a data field that can be queried in the EHR, and 2) providers receive a compiled list of local medical and non-medical referrals for any detected cases of CI. The Alzheimer's Association recommendations for early detection efforts among primary care practices will be provided to each clinical leadership.