Abstract

The Postpartum Specific Anxiety Scale (PSAS) is a valid, reliable measure of postpartum anxiety (PPA). However, it contains 51 items, so is limited by its length. This study aimed to reduce the number of items in the PSAS, produce a small number of high-performing short-form tools, and confirm the factor structure of the most statistically and theoretically meaningful model. A pooled sample of English-speaking mothers (N = 2033) with infants up to 12 months were randomly split into three samples. (1) A principal component analysis (PCA) was conducted to initially reduce the items (n = 672). (2) Four short-form versions of varying length (informed by statistical, theoretical, lay-person, and expert-guided feedback) were developed and their factor structure examined (n = 673). (3) A final confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) was performed to confirm the factor structure of the PSAS Research Short-Form (PSAS-RSF) (n = 688). PCA and theoretical review reduced the items from 51 to 34 (version 1). Statistical review retained 22 items (version 2). Quantitative expert panel data retained 17 items (version 3). Qualitative expert panel data retained 16 items (version 4). The 16-item version was deemed the most theoretically and psychometrically robust. The resulting 16-item PSAS-RSF demonstrated good psychometric properties and reliability. The PSAS-RSF is the first brief research tool which has been validated to measure PPA. Our findings demonstrate it is theoretically meaningful, statistically robust, reliable, and valid. This study extends the use of the measure up to 12 months postpartum, offering broader opportunity for measurement while further enhancing accessibility through brevity.

Highlights

  • Postpartum anxiety (PPA) has been associated with persistent and far-reaching outcomes for mothers and infants

  • A pooled dataset of mothers (N = 2033) with infants aged between birth and 12 months were compiled from five online surveys, which all used the Postpartum Specific Anxiety Scale (PSAS)

  • A final confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) was performed on the third random sample to confirm the final factor structure of the PSAS-RSF

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Summary

Introduction

Postpartum anxiety (PPA) has been associated with persistent and far-reaching outcomes for mothers and infants. PPA has been predominately identified and measured using scales such as the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI; Spielberger et al 1983), and the Generalised Anxiety Disorder-7 (GAD-7; Spitzer et al 2006). These were designed for use in general adult populations which is problematic in a childbearing context (National Collaborating Centre for Mental Health 2014). General measures fail to capture specific maternal- and infant-focused concerns; low scores may not reflect the absence of symptoms (Phillips et al 2009)

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