| Literature DB >> 31050685 |
Pedro Henrique Ribeiro Santiago1, Rachel Roberts2, Lisa Gaye Smithers3, Lisa Jamieson1.
Abstract
The history of colonization contributed to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders becoming one of the most disadvantaged groups in Australia. The multiple social inequalities, and therefore the constant insecurities for many about low income, poor living conditions, unemployment, and discrimination, generate chronic stress in this population. In the Baby Teeth Talk Study, an oral-health randomized controlled trial, the Perceived Stress Scale (PSS-14) was administered to 367 pregnant Aboriginal women at baseline. The aim of the present study was to evaluate the validity and reliability of the PSS-14 in an Aboriginal population. The study analysed: (a) model fit; (b) dimensionality; (c) local dependence; (d) differential item functioning; (e) threshold ordering and item fit; (f) targeting; (g) reliability; and (h) criterion validity. The dimensionality analysis indicated a two-factor structure, with negatively and positively worded items clustering together and 21.7% (95% Agresti-Coull C.I. [17.8%, 26.2%]) statistically significant t-tests between the persons' estimates. After the creation of composite items, the revised Perceived Distress (χ2 (21) = 11.74, p = 0.946) and Perceived Coping (χ2 (28) = 17.63, p = 0.935) subscales fitted the Rasch model. Reliability was modest (PersonSeparationIndexdistress = 0.72; PersonSeparationIndexcoping = 0.76). The latent correlation between the Perceived Distress and Perceived Coping subscales was r = 0.14. It is hypothesized that the social inequalities experienced by the Aboriginal population are so pronounced that even Aboriginal pregnant women that perceived themselves as coping well with life challenges ended up endorsing items regarding high levels of stress. The present research showed that a revised PSS-14 is a culturally valid and modestly reliable psychological instrument to measure stress in a population of pregnant Aboriginal women in Australia.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31050685 PMCID: PMC6499425 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0216333
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
New wording of the PSS-14 items after adaptation for an Aboriginal culture.
| Item number | Item content |
|---|---|
| 1 | … felt upset because of something that happened? |
| 2 | … felt like you couldn’t control the important things in your life? |
| 3 | … felt nervous or stressed? |
| 4 | …dealt well with life hassles? |
| 5 | … coped well with important changes in your life? |
| 6 | … felt able to handle your personal problems? |
| 7 | … felt things were going your way? |
| 8 | … felt unable to cope with all the things that you had to do? |
| 9 | … felt able to control irritations in your life? |
| 10 | … felt you were on top of things? |
| 11 | … felt angered because of things that happened outside of your control? |
| 12 | … found yourself thinking about all the things that you have to do? |
| 13 | … felt able to control how you spend your time? |
| 14 | … felt troubles were piling up so high that you could not deal with them? |
Note.
*Every item started with the sentence “How often during the LAST YEAR have you….”
Fig 1Scatterplot of the persons estimates after the division of the items into even and odd (left) and positively worded and negatively worded items (right). The de-identified numbers indicate the study participants. The x-axis and y-axis indicate the participants’ latent trait estimated from a different subset of items (e.g. in the picture on the left, the x-axis displays the participants’ latent trait according to their responses to odd-numbered items and the y-axis displays the participants’ latent trait according to their responses to even-numbered items). The yellow line is the identity line and the confidence bands are the 95% C.I.
Residual correlations of the negatively worded items.
| Item 1 | Item 2 | Item 3 | Item 8 | Item 11 | Item 12 | Item 14 | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Item 1 | 1 | |||||||
| Item 2 | Obs | 1 | ||||||
| Adj | ||||||||
| Item 3 | Obs | 1 | ||||||
| Adj | ||||||||
| Item 8 | Obs | -0.273 | -0.238 | -0.296 | 1 | |||
| Adj | -0.113 | -0.078 | -0.136 | |||||
| Item 11 | Obs | -0.256 | -0.307 | -0.221 | -0.156 | 1 | ||
| Adj | -0.096 | -0.147 | -0.061 | 0.004 | ||||
| Item 12 | Obs | -0.253 | -0.344 | -0.309 | -0.102 | 1 | ||
| Adj | -0.093 | -0.184 | -0.149 | 0.058 | ||||
| Item 14 | Obs | -0.288 | -0.199 | -0.143 | -0.134 | -0.148 | 1 | |
| Adj | -0.128 | -0.039 | 0.017 | 0.026 | 0.012 |
Note. The residual correlations matrix displays the observed correlation between item responses after the influence of the latent trait (“Perceived Distress”) was accounted by the model. It is also displayed the adjusted residual correlations, which are the differences between the observed residual correlations and the average residual correlation.
Fig 2Analysis of Composite Item 2 DIF by Age (upper-left), Socioeconomic position (upper-right), Smoking status (bottom-left) and Education (bottom-right). Note. The colored points indicate the average observed item scores of each subgroup defined by an exogenous variable (e.g. the blue points in the bottom-left graph represent the average item scores of participants who currently smoked, the red points represent the average item scores of participants who used to smoke, and the green points represent the average item scores of participants who never smoked). The grey logistic curve indicates the expected item responses. The slope of the Item Characteristic Curve indicates the rate of change of the expected value with respect to the latent trait at the mid-point between the minimum and maximum scores.
The fit of the revised negatively worded items (“Perceived distress”) to the Rasch Model.
| Itemi | Location | SE | Fit Residual | Prob | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Composite Item 1 | -0.030 | 0.030 | -0.958 | 230.58 | 4.514 | 7 | 0.299 |
| Composite Item 2 | -0.159 | 0.030 | -2.118 | 233.19 | 3.92 | 7 | 0.828 |
| 8. felt unable to cope with all the things that you had to do? | 0.189 | 0.063 | 231.23 | 3.304 | 7 | 0.378 |
i. Every item started with the sentence “How often during the LAST YEAR have you….”. Note. The second column displays the items’ location on the latent trait scale (i.e. the item difficulty). Values of the Fit Residual statistic indicating item misfit (i.e. lower than -2.5 or higher than 2.5), as well as statistically significant χ2 indicating misfit due to item-trait interaction, were highlighted in bold.
Fig 3Item characteristic curve for Composite Item 2 (left) and Item 8 (right). Note. The x-axis indicates the latent trait and the y-axis indicates the item score. The black points represent the average observed item responses in each class interval. The grey logistic curve indicates the expected item responses. The slope of the Item Characteristic Curve indicates the rate of change of the expected value with respect to the latent trait at the mid-point between the minimum and maximum scores.
Fig 4Item characteristic curve for Item 4 (left) and Item 7 (right). Note. The x-axis indicates the latent trait and the y-axis indicates the item score. The black points represent the average observed item responses in each class interval. The grey logistic curve indicates the expected item responses. The slope of the Item Characteristic Curve indicates the rate of change of the expected value with respect to the latent trait at the mid-point between the minimum and maximum scores.
Threshold ordering of the positively worded items.
| Composite Item 3 | SE | Composite Item 4 | SE | Item 9 | SE | Item 13 | SE | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Threshold 1 | -1.911 | 0.164 | -2.194 | 0.201 | -2.350 | 0.124 | -1.579 | 0.124 |
| Threshold 2 | -1.525 | 0.140 | -1.580 | 0.154 | -0.315 | 0.113 | -0.635 | 0.114 |
| Threshold 3 | -0.939 | 0.133 | -0.905 | 0.134 | 1.076 | 0.146 | 0.167 | |
| Threshold 4 | -0.249 | 0.146 | -0.213 | 0.136 | 1.590 | 0.209 | 0.212 | |
| Threshold 5 | 0.449 | 0.187 | 0.453 | 0.157 | ||||
| Threshold 6 | 1.059 | 0.272 | 1.049 | 0.205 | ||||
| Threshold 7 | 1.485 | 0.414 | 1.532 | 0.288 | ||||
| Threshold 8 | 1.630 | 0.581 | 1.858 | 0.407 |
Note. The item threshold parameter indicates on the latent trait scale the point in which there is an equal probability of response to adjacent categories. Items disordered thresholds are highlighted in bold. The last two thresholds of Item 13 are disordered since the equal probability of selecting the categories “Very often” or “Fairly often” occur for participants with lower Perceived Coping (0.981 logits) than the equal probability of selecting the categories “Sometimes” or “Fairly often” (1.234 logits).
Correlations between Perceived Distress and Perceived Coping subscales with Mastery, Perceived Constraints and Social Support.
| Mastery | 95% C.I | Perceived Constraints | 95% C.I | Social Support Scale | 95% C.I | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PSS subscales | ||||||
| Perceived Distress | 0.29 | [0.14, 0.42] | -0.21 | [-0.35, -0.06] | ||
| Perceived Coping | 0.33 | [0.19, 0.45] | -0.32 | [-0.45, -0.18] | 0.28 | [0.13, 0.41] |
Note. The table displays the Kendall’s τ rank correlations and 95% CI between total (i.e. summated) scores of the Perceived Distress and Perceived Coping subscales and other psychological instruments that evaluate constructs pertaining to the Perceived Stress’ nomological network.