The Stirling Antenatal Anxiety Scale (SAAS): development and initial psychometric validation

•Anxiety in pregnancy is highly prevalent and is associated with negative outcomes.•The Stirling antenatal anxiety scale is a new scale to screen for antenatal anxiety.•The SAAS showed excellent sensitivity (91%) and very good specificity (85%).•The GAD-2, currently recommended in the UK, showed poo...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of affective disorders reports 2022-04, Vol.8, p.100333, Article 100333
Hauptverfasser: Sinesi, Andrea, Cheyne, Helen, Maxwell, Margaret, O'Carroll, Ronan
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Anxiety in pregnancy is highly prevalent and is associated with negative outcomes.•The Stirling antenatal anxiety scale is a new scale to screen for antenatal anxiety.•The SAAS showed excellent sensitivity (91%) and very good specificity (85%).•The GAD-2, currently recommended in the UK, showed poor sensitivity (27%).•The SAAS is psychometrically robust and considered acceptable by pregnant women. Anxiety in pregnancy affects approximately 15% of all pregnant women. Antenatal anxiety can impact negatively on subsequent child development and is a strong predictor of postnatal depression. No anxiety measures with sound psychometric properties are currently available for screening pregnant women. This study aimed to develop and evaluate the psychometric properties of a brief questionnaire specifically devised for use by healthcare professionals and researchers to screen for antenatal anxiety. A mixed-method study for scale development which included: 1) a review examining the psychometric properties of anxiety measures 2) qualitative interviews with women with experience of antenatal anxiety 3) a Delphi study to achieve consensus amongst experts in relation to questions to be included in the scale. For the psychometric validation, 174 women completed the new 10 item scale and the GAD-2/7. A sub-sample of women were also assessed using a diagnostic interview. The Stirling Antenatal Anxiety Scale (SAAS) showed very good diagnostic accuracy (sensitivity=91%; specificity=85%). The GAD-2 performed significantly worse (sensitivity=27%; specificity=96% at the recommended cut off-score) than the new antenatal anxiety scale in identifying women with an anxiety disorder. The key limitation of the research was the relatively small sample size of women assessed with a diagnostic interview for the psychometric validation study. Identifying pregnant women experiencing problematic anxiety is the first, crucial step in providing them with an appropriate level of support. This research provides health professionals with a reliable, brief, and easy-to-complete screening scale for anxiety in pregnancy.
ISSN:2666-9153
2666-9153
DOI:10.1016/j.jadr.2022.100333