Abstract
Accurate screening for cognitive impairment in alcohol and other drug (AOD) services would help to identify individuals who may need supports to obtain the greatest benefit from substance use disorder (SUD) treatment. At present there is no screening measure that has been developed specifically to detect cognitive impairment in a SUD population. This study examines the psychometric properties of the Brief Executive-function Assessment Tool (BEAT), which was specifically designed for this purpose. This study involving 501 individuals with SUD and 145 normal control participants established internal consistency (n = 646; 0.734), interrater (n = 60; 0.994), and test–retest reliability (n = 177; 0.845), and construct (all correlations p ≤ 0.05), and criterion (n = 467; ANCOVA p < 0.001) validity. Test operating characteristics (n = 500; 87% sensitivity, 71% specificity, 21% PPP, and 99% NPP) were also established relative to an independent criterion variable made up of three established performance-based neuropsychological tests. Findings support the reliability and validity of the BEAT as a screening measure of executive function impairment with high sensitivity and a low rate of false negatives.
Acknowledgments
The authors of this work would like to acknowledge all of the research participants, including the normal controls and the SUD participants recruited across several New South Wales residential drug and alcohol services, the staff at those facilities who took valuable time away from their regular roles and responsibilities to facilitate this research, the tireless efforts of the paid and volunteer research assistants who collected the data, the ACE Steering Committee members for their support in setting up the ACE study, from which the data for this project has come and the Agency for Clinical Innovation for supporting the development of the ACE resources, including the BEAT.