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Research Articles

Exploration of the application of Picture-Based Memory Impairment Screen in stroke patients in a preliminary study

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Abstract

Objective The objective was to explore the validity and reliability of the Picture-Based Memory Impairment Screen (PMIS) assessment tool in stroke patients and to provide an objective basis for its application in China.

Methods: A total of 30 stroke patients in the Department of Rehabilitation Medicine were assessed using the Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE), the Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA), and the PMIS. The results were evaluated by content validity, simultaneous validity, consistency test of instruments of assessment, inter-scorer reliability, and retest reliability.

Results: The correlation coefficient between each item score and total score of PMIS was between 0.422 and 0.778 (p < 0.05), showing good content validity. The total score of PMIS was moderately positively correlated with the MMSE short-term memory score (p < 0.001), highly positively correlated with the MMSE long-term memory score and retrospective memory score (p < 0.001), and highly positively correlated with the MoCA long-term memory score, memory index and total score (p < 0.001), indicating good criterion validity. The consistency test of the two instruments of assessment showed that a PMIS ≤ 5 was used as the demarcation score for dementia, and it was tested for consistency with the MMSE dementia score of stroke patients, and the Kappa value was 0.81 (p < 0.001). The inter-scorer reliability and retest reliability were good (inter-scorer reliability intra-group correlation coefficient (ICC) >0.95; retest reliability ICC 0.904).

Conclusion: The PMIS was a reliable and valid assessment tool, which can be used as memory impairment screening tool for stroke patients in China.

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