The need for post-stroke cognitive screening - the rationale behind the Hungarian adaptation of the Oxford Cognitive Screen (OCS) and its pilot study
Tímea Tünde Takács, Judit Kárpáti, Edina Szabó, Károlyné Pálvölgyi, Panna Pálinkás, Orsolya Antal, Júlia Baross, Bernadett Bruckner, Sam Webb, Nele Demeyere, Bence Gunda

TL;DR
This paper introduces a Hungarian version of the Oxford Cognitive Screen to detect cognitive issues after stroke, aiming to improve patient care and outcomes.
Contribution
The first Hungarian adaptation of a stroke-specific cognitive screening tool with cultural and linguistic validation.
Findings
The Hungarian OCS was well-received by patients and clinicians during pilot testing.
The tool identified a median of two impaired cognitive tasks in stroke patients.
The adaptation process confirmed the feasibility and usability of the tool in a Hungarian context.
Abstract
•First Hungarian adaptation of a stroke-specific neuropsychological screening tool, the Oxford Cognitive Screen.•Provides a culturally and linguistically validated, stroke-specific tool.•Pilot study confirmed feasibility and strong acceptance by patients and clinicians.•Fills a critical gap in stroke care by facilitating cognitive screening in Hungary.•Supports earlier detection of PSCI, guiding rehabilitation and improving outcomes. First Hungarian adaptation of a stroke-specific neuropsychological screening tool, the Oxford Cognitive Screen. Provides a culturally and linguistically validated, stroke-specific tool. Pilot study confirmed feasibility and strong acceptance by patients and clinicians. Fills a critical gap in stroke care by facilitating cognitive screening in Hungary. Supports earlier detection of PSCI, guiding rehabilitation and improving outcomes. Post-stroke…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDementia and Cognitive Impairment Research · Acute Ischemic Stroke Management · Stroke Rehabilitation and Recovery
