- Title
- Supporting routine psychosocial assessment in the perinatal period: The concurrent and predictive validity of the Antenatal Risk Questionnaire-Revised
- Creator
- Reilly, Nicole; Hadzi-Pavlovic, Dusan; Loxton, Deborah; Black, Emma; Mule, Victoria; Austin, Marie-Paule
- Relation
- Women and Birth Vol. 35, Issue 2, p. e118-e124
- Publisher Link
- http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.wombi.2021.04.003
- Publisher
- Elsevier
- Resource Type
- journal article
- Date
- 2022
- Description
- Background: Australian clinical practice guidelines support comprehensive psychosocial assessment as a routine component of maternity care. Aim: To examine the concurrent and predictive validity of the Antenatal Risk Questionnaire-Revised (ANRQ-R) when used across the perinatal period. Methods: Women completed the ANRQ-R and a diagnostic reference standard (SAGE-SR) in the second and third trimesters and at 3-months postpartum. ANRQ-R test performance for cut-off scores at each time-point was assessed using Receiver Operator Characteristic (ROC) analysis. Findings: Overall sample sizes were N = 1166 (second trimester), N = 957 (third trimester) and N = 796 (3-month postpartum). 6.5%, 5.6% and 6.2% of women met SAGE-SR criteria for any depressive or anxiety disorder at these time-points (‘cases’), respectively. ROC analysis yielded acceptable areas under the curve (AUC) when the ANRQ-R was used to detect current (AUC = 0.789−0.798) or predict future (AUC = 0.705−0.789) depression or anxiety. Using an example cut-off score of 18 or more, the ANRQ-R correctly classified 72–76% of concurrent ‘cases’ and ‘non-cases’ (sensitivity = 0.70−0.74, specificity = 0.72−0.76) and correctly predicted 74–78% of postnatal ‘cases’ and ‘non-cases’ (sensitivity = 0.52−0.72, specificity = 0.75−0.79). Completion of the ANRQ-R earlier in pregnancy yielded greater positive likelihood ratios for predicting depression or anxiety at 3-months postpartum (cut-off ≥18: second trimester = 3.8; third trimester = 2.2). Conclusion: The ANRQ-R is a structured psychosocial assessment questionnaire that can be scored to provide an overall measure of psychosocial risk. Cut-off scores need not be uniform across settings. Such decisions should be guided by factors including diagnostic prevalence rates, local needs and resource availability.
- Subject
- psychosocial assessment; psychosocial risk; pregnancy; postnatal; validation; SDG 3; Sustainable Development Goals
- Identifier
- http://hdl.handle.net/1959.13/1453803
- Identifier
- uon:44732
- Identifier
- ISSN:1871-5192
- Language
- eng
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