2017
DOI: 10.1186/s12883-017-0925-z
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RETRACTED ARTICLE: Characteristic differences in the mini-mental state examination used in Asian countries

Abstract: BackgroundThe mini-mental state examination (MMSE) was adapted by individual countries according to their languages and cultures, though it has not been systematically compared. The objective of this study was to compare the linguistic and cultural variations of the MMSE used in various Asian countries. With this, we can analyze the strengths and weaknesses of the MMSE and consider using a common version in future international clinical studies in Asia.MethodsWe collected the MMSEs used in 11 Asian nations. Af… Show more

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Cited by 40 publications
(29 citation statements)
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“…[25][26][27][28] However, educational biases have been reported in the RUDAS studies conducted in India, 28 Thailand, 27 and Lebanon especially on items assessing drawing and praxis. 26 To overcome bias due to education and literacy, in some instances, and mainly in the MMSE, education and literacy sensitive items have been adapted, simplified, or omitted including (1) substitution of items involving reading with verbal commands, 29,30 (2) substitution of written language with pictures/figures, 31 (3) substitution of writing a sentence with verbal descriptions, 29,30 (4) omitting tasks that require writing or phonemic fluency, 29,30,32 and (5) simplification of drawing tasks (drawing diamond within a square instead of interlocking pentagons). 29,30 Unfortunately, adaptations to address educational bias in cognitive assessment tests can improve the precision of tests but can also result in issues of equivalence with the original test versions.…”
Section: Instruments To Assess Cognition Adapted From Hicsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…[25][26][27][28] However, educational biases have been reported in the RUDAS studies conducted in India, 28 Thailand, 27 and Lebanon especially on items assessing drawing and praxis. 26 To overcome bias due to education and literacy, in some instances, and mainly in the MMSE, education and literacy sensitive items have been adapted, simplified, or omitted including (1) substitution of items involving reading with verbal commands, 29,30 (2) substitution of written language with pictures/figures, 31 (3) substitution of writing a sentence with verbal descriptions, 29,30 (4) omitting tasks that require writing or phonemic fluency, 29,30,32 and (5) simplification of drawing tasks (drawing diamond within a square instead of interlocking pentagons). 29,30 Unfortunately, adaptations to address educational bias in cognitive assessment tests can improve the precision of tests but can also result in issues of equivalence with the original test versions.…”
Section: Instruments To Assess Cognition Adapted From Hicsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…in the MMSE may not be applicable to populations that use a non-Western calendar, ie, the Lunar or Hindi calendar. 29,30,34 Items regrading orientation in places and place naming (eg, in the MMSE or ACE) may be problematic, particularly in settings where there is no numbering or naming of buildings and streets. 20,34 Some tests, such as getting the patient to repeat a certain expression, ie, "no ifs, ands, or buts," or words used in naming tasks, ie, names of animals, may be of little relevance across different cultures or difficult to be meaningfully translated.…”
Section: Instruments To Assess Cognition Adapted From Hicsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…(3) But even though there is age-related impairment in cognition across multiple domains in healthy ageing, it is adequate to be functionally independent. (4) Cognitive impairment is universally screened using Minimental State Examination (MMSE). (5) There are many other tools to screen cognition but MMSE is widely used and simple and easy to apply.…”
Section: Languagementioning
confidence: 99%
“…77 In MMSE, a change of ≥3 points was considered clinically important in AD. 78 However, the meaningfulness of 3-point changes is likely to vary across populations, age groups, and test versions, [79][80][81] and lack of blinding appears to have inflated effect estimates.…”
Section: Tolerabilitymentioning
confidence: 99%