ABSTRACT
Objective: To examine the psychometric properties of the Demoralisation Scale II (DS-II) and adapt it for use with women in the postnatal period.
Background: Demoralisation is a psychological state characterised by a sense of incompetence and feelings of helplessness and hopelessness in response to a stressful situation. The postnatal period is a life stage of many disruptions. Women may lose their confidence and become demoralised if feeling unprepared for the tasks of motherhood. The DS-II is a 16-item scale developed among cancer patients, but with content that is also relevant postnatally, including items on sense of failure, helplessness, hopelessness, isolation, entrapment and loss of purpose.
Methods: Rasch analysis was used to investigate the psychometric properties of the DS-II and refine the scale for postnatal use.
Results: Participants were 209 women admitted with their babies to a residential early parenting programme. A 14-item revised scale was derived, the Postnatal DS-II, showing good psychometric properties, discriminant validity and sensitivity to change, and being well targeted to the sample.
Conclusion: The Postnatal DS-II could have utility as an assessment tool, helping clinicians to understand better women’s postnatal experiences, assess the effectiveness of interventions and communicate with women in a meaningful and non-stigmatising way.
Acknowledgements
The authors are very grateful to the staff, in particular Nurse Unit Manager Ms Patsy Thean, at the Masada Private Hospital Mother Baby Unit, Melbourne, Australia.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.