Abstract

This paper presents evidence from three samples, two of college students and one of participants in a community smoking-cessation program, for the reliability and validity of a 14-item instrument, the Perceived Stress Scale (PSS), designed to measure the degree to which situations in one's life are appraised as stressful. The PSS showed adequate reliability and, as predicted, was correlated with life-event scores, depressive and physical symptomatology, utilization of health services, social anxiety, and smoking-reduction maintenance. In all comparisons, the PSS was a better predictor of the outcome in question than were life-event scores. When compared to a depressive symptomatology scale, the PSS was found to measure a different and independently predictive construct. Additional data indicate adequate reliability and validity of a four-item version of the PSS for telephone interviews. The PSS is suggested for examining the role of nonspecific appraised stress in the etiology of disease and behavioral disorders and as an outcome measure of experienced levels of stress.

Keywords

PsychologyClinical psychologyAnxietyReliability (semiconductor)Construct validityScale (ratio)PsychometricsPerceived Stress ScaleStress (linguistics)Psychiatry

Affiliated Institutions

Related Publications

The CES-D Scale

The CES-D scale is a short self-report scale designed to measure depressive symptomatology in the general population. The items of the scale are symptoms associated with depress...

1977 Applied Psychological Measurement 52180 citations

The Yale-Brown Obsessive Compulsive Scale

The development design and reliability of the Yale-Brown Obsessive Compulsive Scale have been described elsewhere. We focused on the validity of the Yale-Brown Scale and its sen...

1989 Archives of General Psychiatry 2740 citations

Publication Info

Year
1983
Type
article
Volume
24
Issue
4
Pages
385-385
Citations
30585
Access
Closed

External Links

Social Impact

Altmetric

Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

30585
OpenAlex

Cite This

Sheldon Cohen, Thomas W. Kamarck, Robin Mermelstein (1983). A Global Measure of Perceived Stress. Journal of Health and Social Behavior , 24 (4) , 385-385. https://doi.org/10.2307/2136404

Identifiers

DOI
10.2307/2136404