Title of article :
The performance of the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale in
English speaking and non-English speaking populations in
Australia
Author/Authors :
Rhonda Small، نويسنده , , Judith Lumley، نويسنده , , Jane Yelland، نويسنده , , Stephanie Brown، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Abstract :
Background The Edinburgh Postnatal
Depression Scale (EPDS) has been widely used to
assess maternal depression following childbirth in a
range of English speaking countries, and increasingly
also in translation in non-English speaking ones. It
has performed satisfactorily in most validation studies,
has proved easy to administer, is acceptable
to women, and rates of depression in the range of
10–20% have been consistently found. Methods The
performance of the EPDS was compared across different
population samples in Australia: (i) Women
born in Australia or in another English speaking
country who completed the EPDS in English as part
of the 1994 postal Survey of Recent Mothers (SRM)
6–7 months after birth (n = 1166); (ii) Women born
in non-English speaking countries who also completed
the EPDS in English in the same survey
(n = 142); and (iii) Women born in Vietnam
(n = 103), Turkey (n = 104) and the Philippines
(n = 106) who completed the EPDS 6–9 months after
birth in translation in the Mothers in a New Country
Study (MINC) study (total n = 313). The pattern of
item responses on the EPDS was assessed in various
ways across the samples and internal reliability coefficients
were calculated. Exploratory factor analyses
were also conducted to assess the similarity in the
factor solutions across the samples. Results The EPDS
had good construct validity and item endorsement by
women was similar across the samples. Internal reliability
of the scale was also very satisfactory with
Cronbach’s alpha for each sample being ‡8. Between
39 and 46% of the variance in each of the three main
samples was accounted for by one principal factor
‘depression’ (6–7 items loading), with two supplementary
factors ‘loss of enjoyment’ (2 items loading)
and ‘despair/self-harm’ (2–3 items loading) accounting
for a further 20–25% of the variance. Alternative
one and two factor solutions also showed a great deal
of consistency between the samples. Conclusions The
good item consistency of the EPDS and the relative
stability of the factor patterns across the samples are
indicative that the scale is understood and completed
in similar ways by women in these different English
speaking and non-English speaking population
groups. With the proviso that careful translation
processes and extensive piloting of translations are
always needed, these findings lend further support to
the use of the EPDS in cross-cultural research on
depression following childbirth
Keywords :
postnatal depression – EdinburghPostnatal Depression Scale (EPDS) – cross-culturalresearch – psychometrics
Journal title :
Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology (SPPE)
Journal title :
Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology (SPPE)