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. 2023 Aug 23;3:1100225. doi: 10.3389/frhs.2023.1100225

Table 4.

Descriptive statistics and correlations Among independent and dependent variables and mediators From analysis sample From Measurement time 1.

Variable M SD 1 2 3 4 5 6
1. Altruism 3.84 0.67
2. Team identification 4.92 1.35 .22**
[.09,.35]
3. Self-esteem 3.71 1.01 .04 .08
[−.09,.18] [−.06,.21]
4. Self-endangering behavior tendency 3.49 1.10 .36** .18** −.03
[.24,.47] [.05,.31] [−.17,.10]
5. Self-endangering cognitions 2.94 1.03 .27** .03 −.42** .33**
[.14,.39] [−.11,.17] [−.52, −.30] [.20,.44]
6. Burnout Exhaustion 2.54 0.57 .07 −.14* −.36** −.04 .40**
[−.07,.20] [−.27, −.01] [−.47, −.23] [−.17,.10] [.28,.51]
7. Burnout disengagement 2.08 0.57 −.04 −.18** −.32** −.19** .28** .67**
[−.18,.09] [−.31, −.05] [−.43, −.19] [−.32, −.06] [.15,.40] [.59,.74]

M and SD are used to represent mean and standard deviation, respectively. Values in square brackets indicate the 95% confidence interval for each correlation. The confidence interval is a plausible range of population correlations that could have caused the sample correlation (Cumming, 2014).

*

Indicates p < .05.

**

Indicates p < .01.