Perceived stress during the prenatal period: assessing measurement invariance of the Perceived Stress Scale (PSS-10) across cultures and birth parity

Author:

Katus LauraORCID,Foley Sarah,Murray Aja L.,Luong-Thanh Bao-Yen,Taut Diana,Baban Adriana,Madrid Bernadette,Fernando Asvini D.,Sikander Siham,Ward Catherine L.,Osafo Joseph,Marlow Marguerite,Du Toit Stefani,Walker Susan,Van Vo Thang,Fearon Pasco,Valdebenito Sara,Eisner Manuel P.,Hughes Claire

Abstract

Abstract Maternal prenatal stress places a substantial burden on mother’s mental health. Expectant mothers in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) have thus far received less attention than mothers in high-income settings. This is particularly problematic, as a range of triggers, such as exposure to traumatic events (e.g. natural disasters, previous pregnancy losses) and adverse life circumstances (e.g. poverty, community violence), put mothers at increased risk of experiencing prenatal stress. The ten-item Perceived Stress Scale (PSS-10) is a widely recognised index of subjective experience of stress that is increasingly used in LMICs. However, evidence for its measurement equivalence across settings is lacking. This study aims to assess measurement invariance of the PSS-10 across eight LMICs and across birth parity. This research was carried out as part of the Evidence for Better Lives Study (EBLS, vrc.crim.cam.ac.uk/vrcresearch/EBLS). The PSS-10 was administered to N = 1,208 expectant mothers from Ghana, Jamaica, Pakistan, the Philippines, Romania, South Africa, Sri Lanka and Vietnam during the third trimester of pregnancy. Confirmatory factor analysis suggested a good model fit of a two-factor model across all sites, with items on experiences of stress loading onto a negative factor and items on perceived coping onto a positive factor. Configural and metric, but not full or partial scalar invariance, were established across all sites. Configural, metric and full scalar invariance could be established across birth parity. On average, first-time mothers reported less stress than mothers who already had children. Our findings indicate that the PSS-10 holds utility in assessing stress across a broad range of culturally diverse settings; however, caution should be taken when comparing mean stress levels across sites.

Funder

Economic and Social Research Council

Jacobs Foundation

UBS Optimus Foundation

Fondation Botnar

Consuelo Zobel Alger Foundation

British Academy

Cambridge Humanities Research Grants Scheme

ESRC Impact Acceleration Account Programme

University of Edinburgh College Office for the College of Arts

Humanities and Social Sciences SFC ODA Global Challenges Internal Fund

University of Cambridge GCRF Quality Research Fund

Wolfson Professor of Criminology Discretionary Fund

British Academy Wolfson Foundation Fellowship

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,Obstetrics and Gynecology

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