Assessment of Postpartum Stress Using the Maternal Postpartum Stress Scale (MPSS) in SpanishWomen
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Martínez Vázquez, Sergio; Ruíz Perete, Adrián; de la Torre-Luque, Alejandro; Nakic Radoš, Sandra; Brekalo, Maja; Amezcua Prieto, María Del Carmen; Caparrós González, Rafael ArcángelEditorial
MDPI
Materia
maternal postpartum stress scale (MPSS) Spanish women surveys and questionnaires
Date
2024-05-16Referencia bibliográfica
Martínez Vázquez, S. et. al. Healthcare 2024, 12, 1032. [https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare12101032]
Abstract
Although scales that evaluate postpartum stress exist, they lack specificity in maternal
postpartum stress. The MPSS was created because there was a need to assess maternal stress during
the postpartum stage. The introduction of the MPSS has enriched the evaluation tools for postpartum
stress and has helped understand maternal stress at various postpartum time points and identify
women at high risk for postpartum stress during this period. The aim was to translate the MPSS into
Spanish and study its psychometric properties. Postpartum women (N = 167) with a mean age of
34.26 (SD = 4.71) were involved in this study. In addition to the MPSS, a battery of instruments was
administered: a demographic sheet, the Birth Satisfaction Scale-Revised (BSS-R) and the Edinburgh
Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS). The MPSS data were analyzed, checking item communality first.
As a result, three items showed unsatisfactory communality values (h2 < 0.40). Confirmatory Factor
Analysis was conducted, comparing factor models using the full pool of MPSS items or the version
without items with unacceptable communality. As a result, the original three-factor structure was
endorsed on the Spanish MPSS, with better fit indices when removing items with low communality
(RMSEA = 0.067, CFI = 0.99, TLI = 0.99). The reliability of this version was satisfactory (ω = 0.93).
Finally, group comparisons for some perinatal variables were performed, showing no significant
differences between groups of interest (p = 0.05 and above). To conclude, the MPSS will contribute
to the existing literature, having a wider capacity to assess perinatal mental health difficulties in
Spanish-speaking populations.