Abstract
Background
The Contextual Assessment of Maternity Experience (CAME) interview was developed to characterise the psychosocial context relevant to the maternity experience by providing a detailed picture of women’s lives during the transition to motherhood. More specifically, it was designed to enable the assessment of major risk factors for emotional disturbances in pregnant and postpartum women, especially depression, within the same instrument and using a coherent methodological framework.
Method
The CAME assesses three domains relevant to motherhood: 1) recent life adversity or stressors; 2) the quality of social support and key relationships including partner relationship; and 3) maternal feelings towards pregnancy, motherhood and the baby. Two high-risk samples of inner-city London women were used to test the psychometric qualities of the CAME components.
Results
Overall, the internal consistencies of the relevant components were high in both samples examined. The validity of the three components of the measure was evidenced by their association with either maternal characteristics or parenting assessments.
Conclusion
It was concluded that the CAME shows promise as a measure of the psychosocial risk factors involved in the maternity experience for future research in this field.
The Contextual Assessment of Maternity Experience (CAME) interview was developed to characterise the psychosocial context relevant to the maternity experience by providing a detailed picture of women’s lives during the transition to motherhood. More specifically, it was designed to enable the assessment of major risk factors for emotional disturbances in pregnant and postpartum women, especially depression, within the same instrument and using a coherent methodological framework.
Method
The CAME assesses three domains relevant to motherhood: 1) recent life adversity or stressors; 2) the quality of social support and key relationships including partner relationship; and 3) maternal feelings towards pregnancy, motherhood and the baby. Two high-risk samples of inner-city London women were used to test the psychometric qualities of the CAME components.
Results
Overall, the internal consistencies of the relevant components were high in both samples examined. The validity of the three components of the measure was evidenced by their association with either maternal characteristics or parenting assessments.
Conclusion
It was concluded that the CAME shows promise as a measure of the psychosocial risk factors involved in the maternity experience for future research in this field.
Original language | English |
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Article number | N/A |
Pages (from-to) | 497-508 |
Number of pages | 12 |
Journal | Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology |
Volume | 40 |
Issue number | 6 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - Jun 2005 |
Keywords
- Affective Symptoms
- Cross-Sectional Studies
- Depression, Postpartum
- Female
- Follow-Up Studies
- Humans
- Incidence
- Infant
- Infant, Newborn
- Interview, Psychological
- Life Change Events
- London
- Mothers
- Parenting
- Personality Assessment
- Pregnancy
- Psychometrics
- Reproducibility of Results
- Risk Factors
- Social Support