Article

Anxiety scales used in pregnancy: systematic review

Details

Citation

Sinesi A, Maxwell M, O'Carroll R & Cheyne H (2019) Anxiety scales used in pregnancy: systematic review. BJPsych Open, 5 (1), Art. No.: e5. https://doi.org/10.1192/bjo.2018.75

Abstract
Background Anxiety disorders and self-reported symptoms are highly prevalent in pregnancy. Despite their negative impact on maternal and child outcomes, uncertainty remains regarding which symptoms can be considered accurate indicators of antenatal anxiety. Aims To examine and synthesise the evidence in relation to the psychometric properties and content of self-report scales used to detect anxiety symptoms in pregnant women. Method A systematic search was carried out and the methodological quality of all included studies was assessed. Only those achieving a rating of good or excellent were considered in a synthesis of the best available evidence. Results Several anxiety symptoms and domains were identified as promising for screening for general antenatal anxiety and pregnancy-related anxiety, including elevated levels of worry, symptoms of panic, fear of childbirth and excessive worries about the baby's health. Conclusions This review contributes to the existing knowledge by identifying a number of anxiety symptoms that can be considered psychometrically robust indicators of antenatal anxiety.

Keywords
Pregnancy; anxiety disorders; screening; psychometric properties; pregnancy-specific anxiety;

Journal
BJPsych Open: Volume 5, Issue 1

StatusPublished
FundersChief Scientist Office
Publication date31/01/2019
Publication date online10/01/2019
Date accepted by journal09/11/2018
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/28496
PublisherRoyal College of Psychiatrists

People (3)

People

Professor Helen Cheyne

Professor Helen Cheyne

Personal Chair, NMAHP

Professor Margaret Maxwell

Professor Margaret Maxwell

Director of NMAHP Research Unit, NMAHP

Professor Ronan O'Carroll

Professor Ronan O'Carroll

Professor, Psychology