Limits of the ‘Mini-Mental State’ as a screening test for dementia and delirium among hospital patients

James C. Anthony(Johns Hopkins University), Linda LeResche(Johns Hopkins University), Unaiza Niaz(Johns Hopkins University), Michael R. Von Korff(Johns Hopkins University), Marshal F. Folstein(Johns Hopkins University)
Psychological Medicine
May 1, 1982
Cited by 1,124

Abstract

With a psychiatrist's standardized clinical diagnosis as the criterion, the 'Mini-Mental State' Examination (MMSE) was 87% sensitive and 82% specific in detecting dementia and delirium among hospital patients on a general medical ward. The false positive ratio was 39% and the false negative ratio was 5%. All false positives had less than 9 years of education; many were 60 years of age or older. Performance on specific MMSE items was related to education or age. These findings confirm the MMSE's value as a screen instrument for dementia and delirium when later, more intensive diagnostic enquiry is possible; they reinforce earlier suggestions that the MMSE alone cannot yield a diagnosis for these conditions.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis