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. 2023 Jul 27;20(15):6464. doi: 10.3390/ijerph20156464

Table 8.

Hierarchical linear regression results for the effect of psychological well-being on subjective happiness.

Unstandardized
B SE β p
Model 1 (Constant) 12.537 0.402 <0.001
Psychological well-being 3.136 0.172 0.625 <0.001
Model 2 (Constant) 2.384 0.932 0.011
Psychological well-being 1.773 0.189 0.353 <0.001
Self-compassion 0.065 0.012 0.231 <0.001
Meaning in life 0.043 0.018 0.086 0.018
Resilience 0.077 0.015 0.229 <0.001
Model 3 (Constant) 2.662 1.026 0.01
Psychological well-being 1.729 0.19 0.344 <0.001
Self-compassion 0.069 0.012 0.244 <0.001
Meaning in life 0.046 0.018 0.091 0.013
Resilience 0.071 0.015 0.211 <0.001
Gender (Male vs. Female) −0.741 0.498 −0.046 0.138
Age −0.296 0.186 −0.066 0.113
Has PhD 0.348 0.833 0.017 0.676
Has master’s degree 0.131 0.324 0.012 0.686
Is married 0.073 0.451 0.008 0.871
Is divorced/separated −1.071 0.964 −0.038 0.267
Number of children 0.481 0.225 0.102 0.033
Is a student 0.09 0.413 0.008 0.827
Is unemployed −0.299 0.387 −0.024 0.441
Is employed in tertiary education 0.319 0.67 0.019 0.634

Note: Model 1. F(1, 519) = 331.98, p < 0.001, adjusted R2 = 0.390, model 2. F(4, 516) = 145.81, p < 0.001, adjusted R2 = 0.531, model 3. F(14, 506) = 42.92, p < 0.001, adjusted R2 = 0.543.