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Measuring instrumental activities of daily living in non-demented elderly: a comparison of the new performance-based Harvard Automated Phone Task with other functional assessments.

Gad A MarshallSarah L AghjayanMaria DekhtyarJoseph J LocascioKamal JethwaniRebecca E AmariglioSara J CzajaDavid A LoewensteinKeith A JohnsonReisa A SperlingDorene M Rentz
Published in: Alzheimer's research & therapy (2019)
In this small pilot study, the Harvard APT, a brief, self-administered, objective measure of IADL performance, appears to correlate well with other sensitive measures of everyday functioning, providing good preliminary convergent validity for this new measure. Moreover, it appears to perform well across both CN and MCI participants, which suggests that it is a promising measure of early, clinically meaningful functional change. This may not be the case as suggested in our small sample for subjective IADL scales that may perform differentially depending on the reporter (self vs. study partner) across the clinical spectrum possibly due to diminishing awareness of IADL difficulties in individuals who become cognitively impaired. Secondary prevention trials in AD have a great need for such ecologically valid and reliable measures of early IADL changes.
Keyphrases
  • mild cognitive impairment
  • machine learning
  • crispr cas
  • lymph node metastasis
  • middle aged
  • physical activity
  • community dwelling
  • hiv testing
  • hepatitis c virus
  • men who have sex with men
  • human immunodeficiency virus