A new rating instrument, the Alzheimer's Disease Assessment Scale, was designed specifically to evaluate the severity of cognitive and noncognitive behavioral dysfunctions characteristic of persons with Alzheimer's disease. Item descriptions, administration procedures, and scoring are outlined. Twenty-seven subjects with Alzheimer's disease and 28 normal elderly subjects were rated on 40 items. Twenty-one items with significant intraclass correlation coefficients for interrater reliability (range, .650-.989) and significant Spearman rank-order correlation coefficients for test-retest reliability (range, .514-1) constitute the final scale. Subjects with Alzheimer's disease had significantly more cognitive and noncognitive dysfunction than the normal elderly subjects.
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Wilma G. Rosen
Albert Einstein College of Medicine
Richard C. Mohs
AgeneBio (United States)
Kenneth L. Davis
University of North Carolina at Charlotte
American Journal of Psychiatry
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Rosen et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69d787dbb1cb92dd1bb8b8ae — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1176/ajp.141.11.1356