Abstract

The Loewenstein Occupational Therapy Cognitive Assessment-Geriatric (LOTCA-G) can provide multifaceted and comprehensive measures of cognitive function with reduced literacy demands; however, its minimal clinically important difference (MCID) has not been determined for interpreting the change scores. To establish the LOTCA-G MCID for people with dementia. Psychometric field study. Data were collected in communities. Forty-nine participants with mild to moderate dementia who were enrolled in previous research investigating the effects of cognitive stimulation-related interventions with equivalent training hours. The Mini-Mental State Examination and LOTCA-G were used to assess cognitive function before and after the interventions. The anchor-based and distribution-based approaches were used to estimate the LOTCA-G MCID. Using the anchor-based method, we defined 16 participants as the improvement group, with a mean change score of 5.75 points (the first MCID estimate). The second MCID estimate was 6.23 points, which we calculated from the 49 participants by using the distribution-based method with the medium effect size. Current results suggest that a LOTCA-G change score greater than 5.75 points should be considered as meaningful change for people with dementia. It is important to consider the LOTCA-G MCID as one of the indexes for determining the success of interventions in people with dementia. This study is the first to report the LOTCA-G MCID for dementia. Establishing an MCID for standardized cognitive assessment tools for the aging population can be used to support evidence-based practice in rehabilitation clinics.

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