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City Research OnlineRunning head: FACTOR STRUCTURE OF THE EPDS Factor structure of the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale in a population-based sample FACTOR STRUCTURE OF THE EPDS 2
AbstractTo demonstrate validity, questionnaires should measure the same construct in different groups and across time. The Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS) was designed as a unidimensional scale, but factor analyses of the EPDS have been equivocal, and demonstrate other structures: this may be due to sample characteristics and timing of administration. We aimed to examine the factor structure of the EPDS in pregnancy and postpartum at four time-points in a large population-based sample. We carried out exploratory and confirmatory factor analysis on the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children sample (n = 11,195 -12,166) randomly split in two. We used data from 18and 32 weeks pregnancy gestation; and 8 weeks and 8 months postpartum. A three-factor solution was optimal at all time-points, showing the clearest factor structure and best model fit: Depression (four items) accounted for 43.5 -47.2% of the variance; anhedonia (two items) 10.5 -11.1%; and anxiety (three items) 8.3 -9.4% of the variance. Internal reliability of subscales was good at all time points (Cronbach's alphas: .73 -.78). The EPDS appears to measure three related factors of depression, anhedonia and anxiety and has a stable structure in pregnancy and the first postnatal year.Keywords: ALSPAC, depression, anxiety, postnatal, pregnancy, factor analysis FACTOR STRUCTURE OF THE EPDS
3Factor structure of the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale in a population-based sampleIn pregnancy and the first postnatal year 10-20% of women experience mental illness (Bauer et al., 2014) with detrimental effects on the whole family (Gavin et al., 2005). Interventions can ease symptoms and improve wellbeing of mothers (Dennis & Hodnett, 2007), however effective treatment is hampered by low levels of identification of perinatal mental illness with 50% of women with depression and anxiety not identified (Hewitt et al., 2009) evidence that the EPDS also measures anxiety with three items and that the summed score of these items can differentiate between anxiety and depressive disorders (Bowen, Bowen, Maslany, & Muhajarina, 2008;Matthey, Fisher, & Rowe, 2012; Ross, Evans, Seller, & Romach, 2003) although further research is needed to determine its acceptability, validity and reliability and psychometric properties as a measure of anxiety (Milgrom & Gemmill, 2014). A re...