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A daughter notices her mother asking the same question three times at dinner. Mom passes a brief office screen, but she's still missing bills and forgetting medications.
The answer is not a harder pop quiz. It is the right tool, a family-report screen paired with hearing support and a clear follow-up plan.
That pattern shows up in primary care every day. In 2025, an estimated 7.2 million Americans age 65 and older are living with Alzheimer's dementia, one of the leading causes of death among Americans aged 65 and older.
The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force says evidence is insufficient to recommend for or against routine screening in older adults without symptoms. In practice, screening matters most when concerns are real and the next step is clear.
Use warning signs, setting, and sensory limits to choose the right tool, then move quickly to history, labs, imaging, and care planning when a screen turns positive.
Key Takeaways
Quick screens help you spot risk early, but they work only when the follow-up plan is just as clear.
- Screening is not diagnosis. Most screens take 3 to 15 minutes and flag risk. Diagnosis also needs history, functional impact, labs, imaging, and clinical judgment.
- Match the test to the setting. Use Mini-Cog for Annual Wellness Visit (AWV) triage, MoCA or SLUMS when mild cognitive impairment (MCI) is suspected, AD8 when family input matters, and SAGE for home self-testing.
- Address hearing first. Untreated hearing loss can lower scores on spoken tests. Use hearing aids, a quiet room, and visual tasks when audibility is uncertain.
- A positive screen opens covered next steps. Order core labs, consider brain MRI without contrast, and schedule a Cognitive Assessment and Care Plan visit under CPT 99483.
- Track change over time, not one snapshot. Repeat the same test under similar conditions, use alternate forms when available, and reassess in 6 to 12 months.
What Cognitive Tests for Dementia Measure
These tests sample key brain functions fast, but they cannot diagnose dementia by themselves.
Cognitive tests use brief, structured tasks to check memory, attention, language, executive function, and visuospatial skills, meaning how well someone understands space and shapes.
They flag risk, support shared decisions, and guide next steps. They do not replace a full clinical assessment, rule out every reversible cause, or measure day-to-day function on their own.
Most tools fit into two groups. Performance-based tests, such as Mini-Cog, MoCA, SLUMS, MMSE, and SAGE, are completed by the patient. Informant-based checklists, such as the AD8, are completed by a family member or other person who knows the patient well.

Three Big Benefits of Early Screening
Early screening helps most when it changes what you do next.
Medicare already includes detection of cognitive impairment during the Annual Wellness Visit, so the value comes from what follows.
1. Find Reversible Causes Early
A positive screen should trigger targeted labs and a medication review. That workup can uncover hypothyroidism, vitamin B12 deficiency, depression, anticholinergic medicines that cloud thinking, or sleep apnea.
2. Open Planning and Benefits Early
A flagged screen during an AWV can lead to a separate Cognitive Assessment and Care Plan visit under CPT 99483. That visit includes medication review, a capacity check, an independent historian, usually a family member or caregiver, and a written plan shared with the family.
3. Protect Accuracy by Addressing Hearing
Hearing loss can depress performance on spoken tests. Simple fixes, aids in, quiet room, face-to-face speech, and visual delivery when possible, improve validity.
What to Use When the Test Must Fit the Job
The best test is the one that fits the question, the time limit, and the patient in front of you.
Decide whether you need fast triage, better sensitivity for mild impairment, or caregiver-reported change, then standardize the workflow.
Mini-Cog (About 3 Minutes)
Mini-Cog combines three-word recall with a Clock Drawing Test. Scores range from 0 to 5, and a score below 3 is a positive screen. Use it for quick, language-light triage during the AWV. Trained team members can administer it reliably when they follow the official instructions.
MoCA (About 10 Minutes)
The Montreal Cognitive Assessment, or MoCA, is a 30-point screen that samples executive function, attention, language, visuospatial skills, memory, and orientation. The original validation used a cutoff below 26 to suggest impairment. Compared with the MMSE, MoCA is more sensitive for mild cognitive impairment. Most professional users need training and certification.
SLUMS, MMSE, AD8, and SAGE
The Saint Louis University Mental Status exam, or SLUMS, is an open-access option with education-adjusted scoring. The Mini-Mental State Examination, or MMSE, is still useful for tracking when older scores already exist. The AD8 informant questionnaire takes 2 to 3 minutes, and a score of 2 or higher suggests impairment. SAGE, the Self-Administered Gerocognitive Exam, can be completed at home and brought to the visit.
Where to Get Tested
Start in primary care, then escalate when the pattern is unclear, the risk is high, or safety is slipping.
Home and remote tools can start the workup, but they should never end it.
Creyos offers clinician-grade digital Cognitive Tests for Dementia backed by over 30 years of research. Their Dementia Assessment and Care Plan covers initial screening, a full cognitive assessment, and a prepackaged care plan for patient safety and caregiver support, making it a practical starting point especially when travel, scheduling, or hearing barriers make an in-person visit difficult.
Primary Care and Medicare AWV
Expect a brief screen and a review of risk factors, function, and medications. A positive result can trigger covered follow-up, including labs, imaging when indicated, and the care-planning visit under CPT 99483.
Memory Clinics and Specialists
Neurology and geriatric psychiatry clinics can coordinate neuropsychology testing, MRI, medication review, and safety planning for driving or wandering. Bring a family member and a current medication list.
Audiology and Hearing-First Coordination
If hearing loss is present or suspected, test with hearing aids in place and in a quiet room. A poor score sometimes improves when audibility improves.
When to Escalate Urgently
New confusion with fever, head injury, stroke signs, rapid decline over days, or unsafe behavior such as wandering or driving incidents warrants emergency evaluation right away.
How to Interpret Results and Track Change
Use the same tool under similar conditions and look for change in function, not just change in score.
After a positive screen, order core labs such as B12, TSH, CBC, CMP, and glucose. Consider brain MRI without contrast. Review medications for anticholinergics and benzodiazepines, and treat depression, sleep apnea, or sudden confusion if found.
For tracking, retest at 6 to 12 months, or sooner if function drops. Use alternate MoCA forms, such as 8.2 and 8.3, to reduce practice effects. Document room conditions, hearing aids, and time of day.

Make Screening Work for You
A simple, repeatable workflow beats ad hoc testing every time.
Week 1: Standardize your AWV screen with Mini-Cog, PHQ-9, and AD8 for informants. Build a hearing-first checklist that covers aids, quiet room, and face-to-face speech.
Week 2: Train team members on MoCA or SLUMS scoring and common accommodations. Create a templated positive-screen order set for labs and imaging criteria.
Week 3: Set up a Cognitive Assessment and Care Plan template under CPT 99483 with fields for the independent historian, capacity, goals, caregiver support, and community resources.
Week 4: Create a tracking sheet that logs the instrument, form version, score, functional notes, accommodations used, and retest date. Teach families what a score can show and what it cannot.