# Assessing the stability of Cognitive Stimulation Therapy’s effectiveness on dementia across US and Hong Kong

**Authors:** Ebow Nketsiah, Marla Berg-Weger, Max Zubatsky, Allison Gibson, Jinmyoung Cho, Cara Wallace

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/geroni/igaf122.3541 · 2025-12-31

## TL;DR

This study examines how effective Cognitive Stimulation Therapy is for dementia patients in the US and Hong Kong, finding it generally works but with some differences.

## Contribution

The study evaluates the cross-cultural effectiveness of CST in the US and Hong Kong, highlighting variations in outcomes.

## Key findings

- CST significantly improved cognition in both US and Hong Kong participants.
- Quality of life improved more in the US group compared to Hong Kong.
- Depression decreased in both groups, but physical function only improved in the US.

## Abstract

Cognitive Stimulation Therapy (CST) has demonstrated effectiveness in improving cognition and quality of life for people with mild to moderate dementia and is recognized as a cost-effective psychosocial intervention worldwide. Since its development in the United Kingdom over twenty years ago, CST has been implemented in more than thirty countries across North America, Africa, Asia, Australia, and Europe. Despite this wide adoption, few studies have examined CST’s cross-cultural effectiveness. This study explores the stability of CST outcomes across the United States (US) and Hong Kong (HK). Paired sample t-tests and effect size calculations (Cohen’s d) were used to assess CST’s impact on cognition, quality of life, depression, and physical function among persons with dementia. Findings revealed significant improvements in cognition among CST-US (t(261) = 7.41, d = .458) and CST-HK participants (t(204) = -3.13, d = -.218). Quality of life improved significantly in the US group (t(199) = 8.71, d = .616), while depression significantly decreased in both the US (t(254) = -6.35, d = -.397) and HK (t(236) = -3.08, d = -.200) groups. Physical function improved significantly in the US (t(33) = -2.06, d = -.344) but not in HK (t(84) = -.89, p = .188). These results suggest that CST is effective across cultural contexts, though the magnitude and significance of outcomes vary. The findings highlight the importance of considering cultural and contextual factors when implementing CST globally and support further investigation into adapting interventions to optimize their effectiveness across diverse settings.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** dementia (MONDO:0001627)

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12762128