Informant Questionnaire on Cognitive Decline in the Elderly – Self Report (IQCODE-SR)
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The IQCODE-SR is the self-report adaptation of the widely used Informant Questionnaire on Cognitive Decline in the Elderly (IQCODE). While the original IQCODE is completed by a knowledgeable informant, the IQCODE-SR allows older adults to report on their perceived cognitive changes over the past 10 years. Items cover everyday memory, reasoning, problem-solving, and functional abilities.
Respondents rate whether each ability has improved, stayed the same, or worsened, producing a mean score between 1.0 and 5.0. Higher scores indicate greater perceived decline. Research-based thresholds (e.g., ≥3.30–3.38 for possible cognitive decline; ≥3.60 for stronger concern) provide guidance for further evaluation, but the IQCODE-SR is a screening tool—not a diagnostic assessment.
Type: Self-report cognitive decline screener
Population: Older adults (typically 60+)
Length: 16- or 26-item versions
Format: Self-report
Completion Time: 5–10 minutes
Administer at intake when cognitive concerns are reported, then every 6–12 months to monitor long-term subjective change, with more frequent use only if clinically indicated, as it isn’t designed for high-frequency tracking given its 10-year reference period.
Foundational Context
The IQCODE was originally developed by Jorm (1994) as an informant-based measure to evaluate cognitive decline independent of educational level, literacy, or baseline intellectual ability. The self-report version (IQCODE-SR) uses the same items but shifts perspective to the individual. Research shows that self-report can be useful, particularly when informants are unavailable, when independence is high, or when early subjective cognitive concerns are the focus.
Because the IQCODE assesses change over a decade, it provides a stable long-term view rather than moment-to-moment cognition. Its mean-score format (rather than raw sums) improves interpretability and comparability across the 16- and 26-item versions.
What the Assessment Measures
The IQCODE-SR captures an individual’s self-reported changes in:
- Everyday memory (names, appointments, recent events)
- Learning (new tasks, new information)
- Reasoning and problem-solving
- Orientation (time, place, familiar routes)
- Functional skills (managing finances, appliances, schedules)
- Complex activities of daily living
Respondents compare their current abilities to performance 10 years earlier, providing a retrospective estimate of cognitive aging.
Interpretation Guidelines
Scores represent the mean of all item responses:
- Scale: 1.0–5.0
- 1.0–<3.0: Stability or improvement
- 3.0: No noticeable change
- >3.0: Increasing concern for decline
Common research-based cutoffs:
- ≥3.30–3.38: Suggestive of meaningful cognitive decline
- ≥3.60: Stronger indication of possible dementia
Interpretation Notes:
- The IQCODE-SR is a screening tool, not a diagnostic instrument
- Cutoffs vary by population, culture, and setting
- Self-report may under- or overestimate decline depending on:
- Insight
- Mood (e.g., depression)
- Health anxiety
- Personality
- Cognitive load or stress
- Should be combined with cognitive testing and clinical evaluation
Psychometric Properties
Reliability
- Strong internal consistency in both 16- and 26-item versions
- Good test–retest reliability across diverse samples
Validity
- Correlates well with informant-rated cognitive decline
- Good discriminant validity between dementia and non-dementia groups
- Less affected by education or linguistic background compared to traditional cognitive tests
- Self-report accuracy may be lower in individuals with limited insight or anosognosia
Administration Considerations
- Works well in primary care, geriatrics, neurology, and memory-clinic settings
- Easy to administer digitally or on paper
- Best used when informants are unavailable or when subjective decline is a key clinical concern
- Follow-up cognitive testing (MMSE, MoCA, neuropsychological evaluation) is required for diagnostic clarity
- May require sensitive framing to reduce anxiety about memory concerns
Limitations
- Self-report accuracy varies depending on mood, insight, and psychological factors
- Not suitable for individuals with significant anosognosia or limited self-awareness
- Long-term (10-year) comparison can be difficult for some respondents
- Not intended for diagnosing dementia or determining cognitive capacity
- Not validated for acute cognitive change (e.g., delirium)
References
- Jorm, A. F. (1994). A short form of the IQCODE. Psychological Medicine, 24(1), 145–153. https://doi.org/10.1017/S003329170002691X
- Jorm, A. F. (2004). Review of the IQCODE. International Psychogeriatrics, 16(3), 275–293. https://doi.org/10.1017/S1041610204000390
- University of Edinburgh. (n.d.). IQCODE resources. https://www.psy.ed.ac.uk/~gsergean/IQCODE/
Disclaimer
This article is for educational purposes only and should not substitute for cognitive testing, diagnostic assessment, or medical advice. The IQCODE-SR is a subjective screening tool and must be interpreted within a broader clinical evaluation.
Permissions
The IQCODE and IQCODE-SR are authored by A. F. Jorm. They may be used for non-commercial clinical and research purposes with appropriate citation. Reproduction of item content or scoring instructions may require permission from the author or rights holders.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is the IQCODE-SR diagnostic for dementia?
No. It is a screening tool and must be followed by clinical evaluation.
What do higher scores mean?
More perceived decline over the past decade.
Which version is better—16 or 26 items?
Both are valid; the 16-item form is more efficient with comparable accuracy.
Can depression or anxiety affect responses?
Yes—mood can significantly influence perceived cognitive decline.
Should the IQCODE-SR be repeated often?
Every 6–12 months at most, due to the long-term reference period.
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