Assessment of cognitive function and associated factors among Parkinson’s disease patients and control group using IDEA cognitive screen, TASH, A.A, Ethiopia.

dc.contributor.advisorSeid Ali
dc.contributor.advisorGetahun Mengistu
dc.contributor.authorHanna Kiflu
dc.date.accessioned2026-02-17T09:09:20Z
dc.date.available2026-02-17T09:09:20Z
dc.date.issued2024-02-14
dc.description.abstractBackground: The global prevalence of Parkinson’s disease (PD) is on the rise and is expected to reach nearly 9 million cases by 2030. Cognitive impairment (CI), which encompasses both dementia and cognitive impairment without dementia (CIND), represents a common complications of PD that carry significant clinical consequences. About 40% of individuals with PD develop dementia—this rate is six times greater than that of age-matched healthy peers. The Identification of Dementia in Elderly Africans (IDEA) cognitive screen is a concise, multi dimensional assessment tool created to tackle the educational bias seen in other cognitive screening instruments used in sub-Saharan Africa. This research evaluates cognitive ability in PD patients utilizing the validated IDEA cognitive screen. In our clinical environment, there is a need for routine cognitive impairment screening among PD patients. This need arises from the lengthy and education-biased nature of currently available validated cognitive assessment tools. Conversely, the IDEA screen is a brief cognitive assessment that is practical for implementation in busy tertiary hospitals such as TASH. Objective: To assess cognitive function and associated factors among Parkinson’s disease patients and baseline characteristics matched control group using IDEA cognitive screen, Tikur Anbessa Specialized Hospital, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia Methods: A comparative cross-sectional study was conducted using systematic random sampling on 150 PD patients and on 150 baseline-matched control group; age, sex, educational level & comorbidity at TASH from September to December 2024. Data were collected using pretested questionnaires and the IDEA cognitive tool by trained neurology residents & general practitioners. The data was cleaned, edited, entered, and analyzed using SPSS version 30. A non parametric regression model was employed to determine factors associated with cognitive function impairment. Results: Among 150 PD patients, 3.3% met the criteria for probable dementia and 9.3% for possible dementia based on IDEA screening. The prevalence of cognitive impairment in the PD group was 9.9% higher than in the matched control group. The median IDEA score was significantly lower in PD patients (12.4 ± 2.25) compared to controls (13.31 ± 1.53). Among PD patients, median IDEA scores declined progressively with older age and lower educational attainment. Illiteracy emerged as the sole significant predictor of cognitive impairment in multivariate analysis. Conclusion: In this study, IDEA revealed probable or possible dementia in 12.6% of PD patients versus 2.7% of controls, reflecting a fourfold higher prevalence of cognitive impairment in PD. Illiteracy was the sole significant predictor of dementia in PD patients, highlighting residual educational bias despite IDEA’s design for low-literacy settings. Key suggestions from the study iv include developing education-stratified IDEA cutoffs for urban LMIC populations, validating IDEA against PD-specific diagnostic tools, improving healthcare-seeking behavior among PD patients, and supplementing IDEA with PD-focused cognitive screens to better capture PD associated mild cognitive impairment. Further research, such as multicenter stu
dc.identifier.urihttps://etd.aau.edu.et/handle/123456789/7667
dc.language.isoen
dc.publisherAddis Ababa University
dc.subjectAssessment of cognitive
dc.subjectassociated factors among Parkinson’s
dc.subjectdisease patients and control
dc.titleAssessment of cognitive function and associated factors among Parkinson’s disease patients and control group using IDEA cognitive screen, TASH, A.A, Ethiopia.
dc.typeThesis

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