Outcome
Type |
Measure |
Description |
Time frame |
Safety issue |
Primary |
Montreal cognitive assessment scale (MoCA) |
The Changsha version of the MoCA questionnaire was used in this study, which included eight cognitive assessments of visuospatial and executive functions, naming, memory, attention, speech, abstraction, delayed recall, and orientation, with a total score of 30, with higher scores indicating better cognitive functioning. |
2023.6.1-2024.8.1 |
|
Primary |
Mini-Mental State Examination(MMSE) |
The MMSE is used for cognitive function testing. The scale consists of 11 entries, and the test includes cognitive domains such as orientation, immediate memory, attention and computation, speech, and visuospatial, with a total score of 30, which has good reliability and validity. The scale has a total score of 30, and the higher the score, the more severe the cognitive impairment. |
2023.6.1-2024.8.1 |
|
Primary |
Subjective cognitive decline questionnaire (SCD questionnaire 9, SCD-9) |
The SCD-9 is mainly used to distinguish between normal people and SCD patients. The scale mainly consists of 2 dimensions, i.e., overall memory ability and time comparison (4 entries) and daily activity ability (5 entries), with a total of 9 entries, and the total scale score ranges from 0 to 9, with higher scores indicating a more severe degree of SCD. |
2023.6.1-2024.8.1 |
|
Secondary |
Activities of Daily Living (ADL) |
The Activities of Daily Living (ADL) scale adopts a Liket four level rating. The evaluation results can be analyzed based on total score, dimension score, and individual score. A total score of 20 is considered completely normal, while a score above 20 indicates varying degrees of functional decline. A score of 1 for each item indicates normal functionality, while a score of 2-4 indicates decreased functionality. |
2023.6.1-2024.8.1 |
|
Secondary |
general information |
Using a self-made general information scale, such as age, gender, education level, and other basic personal information |
2023.6.1-2024.8.1 |
|
Secondary |
Self Rating Anxiety Scale (SAS) |
The Self Rating Anxiety Scale (SAS) has a total of 20 items, of which 5, 9, 13, 17, and 19 items are scored in reverse. The scale adopts a 1-4 level scoring method (1 point for no or very little time; 2 points for a small portion of time; 3 points for a considerable amount of time; 4 points for the vast majority or all of time). Individuals fill in the scale based on their own situation in the most recent week, multiply the calculated total score by 1.25, take an integer as the standard score, and use it as a statistical indicator. The higher the standard score, the more severe the anxiety level of the individual. |
2023.6.1-2024.8.1 |
|
Secondary |
Social Support Rating Scale (SSRS) |
The Social Support Rating Scale (SSRS) includes three dimensions: objective support, subjective support, and support utilization, with a total of 10 items: 1 point (none) to 4 points (full support). The higher the score in each dimension, the more support received. |
2023.6.1-2024.8.1 |
|
Secondary |
Lubben Social Network Scale (LSNS-6) |
The Lubben Social Network Scale (LSNS-6) is used to measure the structural characteristics of individual family and friend networks, as well as the supporting functions played by the network, in order to reflect the social network level of the respondents. It consists of two parts: the home network and the friend network, each with three items, totaling six items. Each entry has 5 options, with a score of 0-5 points and a total score of 0-30 points. The higher the score, the higher the level of social network, and<12 points indicates insufficient social network. |
2023.6.1-2024.8.1 |
|
Secondary |
Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI) |
The Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI) has a total of 19 items, divided into 7 components: subjective sleep quality, time to fall asleep, sleep time, sleep efficiency, sleep disorders, hypnotic drugs, and daytime function. The higher the total score, the worse the sleep quality. |
2023.6.1-2024.8.1 |
|
Secondary |
Corner Davidson Resilience Scale (CDRISC) |
The Corner Davidson Resilience Scale (CDRISC) consists of 10 items and uses the Likert 5-point scoring system. A score of 0-4 indicates "never", "rarely", "sometimes", "often", and "always", with higher scores indicating higher levels of psychological resilience. |
2023.6.1-2024.8.1 |
|
Secondary |
Geriatric Depression Scale (GDS-15) |
The Geriatric Depression Scale (GDS-15) is used to investigate the psychological feelings of patients in the past week. Result evaluation criteria: The total score range is 0-15 points, with higher scores indicating more severe depression. 1-5 points are subthreshold depression, 6-7 points are mild depression, 8-11 points are moderate depression, and 12-15 points are severe depression. |
2023.6.1-2024.8.1 |
|