# The mini-Oxford cognitive screen (Mini-OCS): A very brief cognitive screen for use in chronic stroke

**Authors:** Sam S Webb, Luning Sun, Eugene Yee Hing Tang, Nele Demeyere

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/esj/23969873251358811 · European Stroke Journal · 2026-01-01

## TL;DR

The paper introduces a new brief cognitive screening tool, the Mini-Oxford Cognitive Screen, designed specifically for chronic stroke survivors.

## Contribution

The Mini-OCS is a validated, brief cognitive screen tailored for chronic stroke survivors, addressing a gap in current tools.

## Key findings

- The Mini-OCS demonstrated good psychometric properties, including retest reliability and construct validity.
- The Mini-OCS showed increased sensitivity in memory and executive function compared to the original OCS.
- Normative data was established for the Mini-OCS using a sample of healthy controls and chronic stroke survivors.

## Abstract

No stroke-specific cognitive screen currently exists for community-dwelling chronic stroke survivors, with primary care and community settings relying on dementia tools which often do not consider specific post-stroke impairments. The Oxford Cognitive Screen (OCS) was developed for use in acute stroke, but its administration time is prohibitive for brief screening. Here, we aimed to develop, standardise and psychometrically validate the Mini-Oxford Cognitive Screen (Mini-OCS), a brief (<8 min) cognitive screen aimed for use in chronic stroke.

Existing full OCS data for 464 English participants who were ⩾6 months post-stroke were analysed for the possibility of a short-form. Theoretical choices were made to adapt the short-form to be suitable for use in chronic stroke. The Mini-OCS was then completed by 164 neurologically healthy controls (M
 age = 68.66; SD = 12.18, M
 years of education 15.40; SD = 3.64, 61% female), and 89 chronic stroke survivors (M
 age = 69.86; SD = 14.83, M
 years education = 14.29; SD = 4.01, 44.94% female, M
 days since stroke = 597.02; SD = 881.12, 78.57% ischaemic, Median NIHSS = 6.5 (IQR = 4–11)). In addition, the original OCS, the Montreal Cognitive Assessment, and an extended neuropsychological battery were administered. Psychometric properties of the Mini-OCS were evaluated via construct validity and retest reliability.

Normative data for the Mini-OCS is provided and known-group discrimination demonstrates increased sensitivity in the memory and executive function domains compared to the OCS. The Mini-OCS further met all appropriate benchmarks for evidence of retest reliability and construct validity.

The Mini-OCS is a short-form standardised cognitive screening tool with initial evidence of good psychometric properties for use in a chronic stroke population.

Graphical abstract

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** stroke (MONDO:0005098)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** ischaemic (MESH:D018917), acute stroke (MESH:D020521), post-stroke impairments (MESH:D004834), dementia (MESH:D003704)

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

50 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12866220/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12866220