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Alzheimer&acutes Disease/Dementia Current Trends – Screening Testing

Introduction
What Is a Screening Test?
What Screening Tests Are Marketed Directly to Consumers?
What Consumer Screening Tests Are Marketed for Dementia?
Facts About the Early Alert Alzheimer’s Home Screening Test
Facts About the Minnesota Cognitive Acuity Screen (MCAS)
Where Can I Get Information About Other Alzheimer-Related Issues

Introduction

Over the past few years, Alzheimer’s Disease screening tests have become available to consumers. Licensed clinical social workers who have special training in genetic counseling can help individuals or family members who are interested in these tests.  Below is a fact sheet from the Alzheimer’s Association briefly describing the various screening tests.

What Is a Screening Test?

A screening test is a preliminary procedure administered to distinguish individuals who may need further evaluation for a disorder from those who are less likely to need additional testing. Familiar examples of screening tests include Pap smears, mammograms, and kits for collecting small stool samples to be examined for hidden blood. Most such tests are administered under the supervision of a health care professional who orders the test, communicates the result, and discusses appropriate next steps.

What Screening Tests Are Marketed Directly to Consumers?

Test developers, health care facilities, and other sources are marketing a growing number of screening tests directly to consumers. Some of these tests are offered on a "self-referred" basis—individuals taking the test do not need a physician's order for it, and the testing facility reports the results directly to the examinee. Self-referred testing is a controversial practice. It is lucrative for facilities administering these tests because consumers must pay for them directly. Insurance plans generally do not pay for self-referred procedures, so facilities offering them can set their own price and require payment in advance.

What Consumer Screening Tests Are Marketed for Dementia?

The Alzheimer's Association has received numerous questions about two dementia screening tests recently marketed directly to consumers. One is the Early AlertAlzheimer's Home Screening Test, available in pharmacies and from a Web site. The other is the Minnesota Cognitive Acuity Screen (MCAS), sold by telephone and through a Web site.

The Alzheimer's Association believes that no single dementia screening procedure is a meaningful substitute for established diagnostic criteria for Alzheimer's disease administered by a skilled physician. Although these screening tests do not claim to offer a definitive diagnosis, any test that may plant the idea of a serious illness in a test-taker's mind has the potential to cause great psychological distress. The whole process of assessment, diagnosis, and diagnostic disclosure should be carried out within the context of an ongoing relationship with responsible health care professionals. Here are some relevant facts about each of the tests currently generating frequent questions:

Facts About the Early Alert Alzheimer's Home Screening Test

  • This test, marketed by FMG Innovations, Inc., sells for around $15 – $20 in pharmacies and on the Internet.

  • It is packaged in a small box that contains an instruction sheet, a pencil, and a booklet with 12 "scratch and sniff" odor strips. Examinees are instructed to scratch each strip to release the smell, then circle one of four words that best describe the odor. Choices include "cinnamon," "dog," "soap," "garlic," "motor oil," fruit and floral fragrances, and a variety of other scents.

  • Correct answers are provided in an answer key at the back of the booklet. Examinees with four or more incorrect choices are advised to consult their physician.

  • The instruction sheet states, "Smell loss is among the first signs of Alzheimer's disease. Experts recommend screening for smell loss once a year after the age of 65." It is true that there are legitimate scientific investigations exploring a possible link between smell loss and Alzheimer's disease, but the relationship has not been confirmed or quantified. No currently accepted diagnostic criteria for Alzheimer's include evaluation of smell, and there is no recommendation for annual smell testing from any recognized authority involved in establishing clinical guidelines.

  • Many factors other than Alzheimer's disease can impair smell, including current smoking or past smoking, certain drugs, a wide variety of medical conditions, and individual differences in sensitivity to odors.

  • Medical and diagnostic equipment, including products marketed directly to consumers, is regulated by the Center for Devices and Radiologic Health (CDRH) of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA). According to a CDRH spokesperson, the Early Alert smell test has not been cleared or approved for marketing.

Facts About the Minnesota Cognitive Acuity Screen (MCAS)
  • The MCAS is sold by telephone and over the Internet for $95 by Nation's CareLink, a care management firm specializing in geriatric assessments.

  • The test consists of a 15-minute question-and-answer telephone interview administered by a registered nurse who asks test-takers such questions as their name, address, and birthday, what day it is, and how they would handle an emergency such as a fire in their home. Examinees are also asked to repeat a six-digit number, to remember 10 words, and to tap on the telephone when instructed. Nurses score each examinee, and those whose scores fall below certain levels are considered to need monitoring or to have "failed" the test.

  • The test's developers recommend annual testing. This recommendation does not reflect a policy established by any recognized clinical guideline.

  • The chief use of the MCAS has been for commercial rather than clinical purposes—the test was developed by Nation's CareLink as a risk management tool to help insurers avoid issuing long-term care policies to individuals judged likely to develop dementia.

  • The MCAS Web site describes the test as "98.1 percent effective in identifying cognitive function." In support of this statement, MCAS cites an article published by the test's developers in the October 2000 edition of the journal Neuropsychiatry, Neuropsychology, and Behavioral Neurology. The abstract of this article on PubMed, the on-line literature database for the U.S. National Library of Medicine, concludes with the developer's own statement that "The Minnesota Cognitive Acuity Screen (MCAS) should undergo further study in unselected elderly populations to better understand its value as a screening tool." The PubMed database contains no additional articles about the test.

Where Can I Get Information About Other Alzheimer-Related Issues?

To receive information about other important issues related to Alzheimer's disease, please call our Contact Center at (800) 272-3900 or visit the Alzheimer's Association Web site at www.alz.org.

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Suicide Prevention Resources – The SOS Suicide Prevention Program


Introduction

The SOS Signs of Suicide® Program for secondary schools, co-sponsored by the National Association of Social Workers, is a cost-effective program of mental health screening and suicide prevention, which can be easily implemented by school social workers during one or two school periods.

A widely studied, evidence-based program, SOS is the first suicide prevention program to be selected by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Adminstration SAMHSA for its Registry of Effective Programs. It is the only school-based suicide prevention program that has been shown to reduce suicidality in a randomized, controlled study American Journal of Public Health, March 2004 .

The main teaching tool of the program is a video that teaches students how to identify symptoms of depression and suicidality in themselves or their friends and encourages help-seeking. The program's primary objectives are to educate teens that depression is a treatable illness and to equip them to respond to a potential suicide in a friend or family member using the SOS technique. SOS is an action-oriented approach instructing students how to ACT Acknowledge, Care and Tell in the face of this mental health emergency.

How to Obtain a Kit

A kit of materials is available that includes a staff procedure manual and training video, student screening forms, an educational video and discussion guide, and brochures on suicide and depression for students and parents. Since 2000, more than 1,500 schools have implemented the program.

To learn more about the program or to obtain a kit, go to www.MentalHealthScreening.org or call 781-239-0071.

Depression Resources

Depression and Bipolar Support Alliance
The Depression and Bipolar Support Alliance (DBSA) is the nation's leading patient-directed organization focusing on the most prevalent mental illnesses – depression and bipolar disorder. The organization fosters an understanding about the impact and management of these life-threatening illnesses by providing up-to-date, scientifically-based tools and information written in language the general public can understand. DBSA supports research to promote more timely diagnosis, develop more effective and tolerable treatments and discover a cure. The organization works to ensure that people living with mood disorders are treated equitably.
www.dbsalliance.org

Families for Depression Awareness
The mission of Families for Depression Awareness is to help families recognize and cope with depressive disorders.  The organization works to reduce stigma associated with depressive disorders and to unite families and help them heal in coping with depression.  Families for Depression Awareness has created a Depression Monitoring Kit which is an educational booklet to help adults with depression (and their family members) monitor treatment with daily and weekly tools. 
http://familyaware.org

National Institute of Mental Health
The National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) is the lead Federal agency for research on mental and behavioral disorders. Its public health mission mandates a focus on those with the most serious mental illness. NIMH works to improve mental health through biomedical research on mind, brain, and behavior.
www.nimh.nih.gov/healthinformation/depressionmenu.cfm

National Mental Health Association
The National Mental Health Association (NMHA) is the country’s oldest and largest nonprofit organization addressing all aspects of mental health and mental illness. With more than 340 affiliates nationwide, NMHA works to improve the mental health of all Americans, especially the 54 million people with mental disorders, through advocacy, education, research and service. www.nmha.org

Screening for Mental Mental Health Inc.
Screening for Mental Health Inc. (SMH) is the non-profit organization that first introduced the concept of large-scale mental health screenings with its flagship program National Depression Screening Day in 1991. SMH programs now include both in-person and online programs for depression, bipolar disorder, generalized anxiety disorder, post-traumatic stress disorder, eating disorders, alcohol problems, and suicide prevention.
www.mentalhealthscreening.org