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The Perceived Stress Questionnaire (PSQ) Reconsidered: Validation and Reference Values From Different Clinical and Healthy Adult Samples

Herbert Fliege, PhD, Matthias Rose, MD, Petra Arck, MD, Otto B. Walter, MD, Rueya-Daniela Kocalevent, MA, Cora Weber, MD and Burghard F. Klapp, MD, PhD

From the Department of Psychosomatic Medicine, Charité-University Hospital Berlin, Berlin, Germany.



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Figure 1. Linear structural equation model of a 4-factor solution based on one latent construct of perceived stress

 


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Figure 2. Tentative summary of the PSQ mean differences between samples by post hoc t tests (p≤ .05). (Note: a complete overview of the comparisons can be requested from the authors.)

 


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Figure 3. Mean differences between age groups for different dimensions of perceived stress (PSQ scales)

 


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Figure 4. Immunological differences between women with high versus low stress scores after miscarriage (median-split; t tests, ES = effect size d)

 


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Figure 5. Changes of perceived stress of Psychosomatic Medicine in patients after psychotherapeutic treatment (left) and of tinnitus patients after relaxation training (right) (t tests for dependent measures, ES = effect size d')

 





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