- Title
- The antenatal risk questionnaire-revised: Development, use and test-retest reliability in a community sample of pregnant women in Australia
- Creator
- Reilly, Nicole; Loxton, Deborah; Black, Emma; Austin, Marie-Paule
- Relation
- Journal of Affective Disorders Vol. 293, p. 43-50
- Publisher Link
- http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jad.2021.05.081
- Publisher
- Elsevier
- Resource Type
- journal article
- Date
- 2021
- Description
- Background: Routine psychosocial assessment during pregnancy and the first postnatal year is a public health strategy that prioritises early identification of known risk factors for poor perinatal mental health. We aimed to report on the development and use of the Antenatal Risk Questionnaire-Revised (ANRQ-R), contribute normative data for a community sample of pregnant women and examine its test-retest reliability. Methods: The ANRQ-R was developed in consultation with an expert advisory group. Women completed the ANRQ-R with their midwife at their first antenatal appointment. Test-retest analysis was restricted to women who consented to follow-up and completed a repeat ANRQ-R within four weeks. Results: 7183 women completed the ANRQ-R (total score M = 12.05, Mdn=10; range =5–49). There were some statistically significant differences in total score across maternal age group (χ2=69.75, p<.001), country of birth (χ2=144.01, p<.001) and socioeconomic quintiles (χ2=20.13, p<.001), however the effect sizes of all differences were either small or not clinically significant. Test-retest reliability for the ANRQ-R total score was good (N = 1670; ICC=0.77). Item-level test-retest reliabilities were moderate to good (ICC range=0.65–0.80; kappa coefficient range=0.31–0.74). Limitations: The study was conducted at a single site. Although there was significant diversity in terms of maternal age and country of birth, the majority of participants were partnered and resided in socio-economically advantaged areas, limiting the generalisability of results. Conclusions: This study contributes significant normative data for the ANRQ-R and offers valuable insights for clinicians and researchers working with particular sub-groups of the perinatal population. Additional psychometric examination of the ANRQ-R, including its concurrent and predictive validity, is required.
- Subject
- psychosocial; risk; assessment; pregnancy; SDG 3; Sustainable Development Goals
- Identifier
- http://hdl.handle.net/1959.13/1451820
- Identifier
- uon:44281
- Identifier
- ISSN:0165-0327
- Language
- eng
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