Affiliation:
1. Health Services Academy Islamabad Pakistan
2. Department of Biosciences COMSATS University Islamabad Islamabad Pakistan
3. Department of Applied Epidemiology National Centre for Epidemiology and Population Health, ANU College of Health and Medicine the Australian National University Canberra Australia
4. Kabul University of Medical Sciences Kabul Afghanistan
Abstract
AbstractBackground and AimsPerinatal grief have a significant influence on maternal mental health, hence appropriate tools for assessment are necessary. In this study, we translated and validated the Perinatal Grief Scale in Urdu (PGS‐Urdu) for use in Pakistan, therefore filling the gap in validated tools.MethodsData was collected from 165 women using consecutive sampling. Initially, “forward/backward” translation was used. For validity, content validity index and confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) were used respectively, and “Cronbach's‐Alpha” for reliability. In the validity stage, items 8, 11, 23, and 32 of the original scale were eliminated based on feedback from the target groups and the expert panel. For data‐analysis, SPSS 26 and Amos 26 were used.ResultsIn analyzing the “Confirmatory factor analysis”, the “all‐fitness indicators” validated the three‐factor structure of 29‐item main scale. Cronbach alpha value was 0.83 for the entire scale The CFA results showed that all fitness indicators, with the exception of four, had loadings greater than 0.20, supporting the main scale's three‐factor structure. With a Cronbach's Alpha value of 0.83 for overall reliability, and varied from 0.81 to 0.87 for the PGS‐U variables. the PGS‐U exhibits an acceptable level of internal consistency.ConclusionThe PGS‐U identifies women in perinatal grief for medical and social care. This research supports using the Urdu perinatal grief scale in obstetrics and bereavement counseling to reduce maternal mental health issues.