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. 2024 Dec 12;17(1):e12618. doi: 10.1111/aphw.12618

TABLE A3.

Candidate predictors of mastery (Health and Retirement Study [HRS]: N = 13,771).

Candidate predictor Beta 95% CI
Health behaviors
Frequent physical activity 0.01 −0.06, 0.07
Smoking 0.01 −0.13, 0.14
Heavy drinking 0.03 −0.10, 0.15
Sleep problems −0.07 −0.11, −0.02**
Physical health
Number of physical conditions −0.03 −0.10, 0.04
Diabetes −0.04 −0.14, −0.06
Hypertension 0.01 −0.08, 0.09
Stroke −0.02 −0.10, 0.13
Cancer 0.04 −0.13, 0.05
Heart disease 0.01 −0.10, 0.12
Lung disease 0.04 −0.16, 0.08
Arthritis −0.05 −0.18, 0.08
Overweight/obese −0.04 −0.14, 0.06
Physical functioning limitations −0.09 −0.16, −0.01*
Cognitive impairment −0.01 −0.10, 0.08
Chronic pain −0.06 −0.13, 0.01
Self‐rated health 0.07 0.03, 0.11**
Hearing 0.01 −0.02, 0.04
Eyesight 0.04 0.01, 0.07**
Psychological well‐being
Positive affect 0.13 0.10, 0.16***
Life satisfaction 0.11 0.07, 0.14***
Optimism 0.08 0.05, 0.12***
Purpose in life 0.11 0.07, 0.15***
Health mastery 0.10 0.07, 0.12***
Financial mastery 0.10 0.07, 0.12***
Psychological distress
Depression −0.09 −0.17, −0.02*
Depressive symptoms −0.05 −0.07, −0.02***
Hopelessness −0.09 −0.12, −0.07***
Negative affect −0.09 −0.12, −0.05***
Anxiety −0.07 −0.11, −0.04***
Trait anger −0.03 −0.06, 0.00
State anger −0.01 −0.03, 0.02
Cynical hostility −0.01 −0.04, 0.01
Stressful life events −0.02 −0.04, 0.00
Financial strain −0.03 −0.06, 0.00
Daily discrimination −0.05 −0.07, −0.02***
Major discrimination −0.01 −0.05, 0.03
Social factors
Loneliness −0.06 −0.08, −0.03***
Living with spouse −0.10 −0.19, −0.01*
Contact children
<Every few months Reference Reference
1–2×/month 0.02 −0.08, 0.13
1–2×/week 0.06 −0.04, 0.15
>3×/week 0.09 0.00, 0.19
Contact other family
<Every few months Reference Reference
1–2×/month 0.03 −0.02, 0.08
1–2×/week 0.03 −0.04, 0.09
>3×/week 0.07 0.02, 0.13*
Contact friends
<Every few months Reference Reference
1–2×/month 0.05 −0.06, 0.16
1–2×/week 0.04 −0.05, 0.13
>3×/week 0.09 0.00, 0.18
Closeness with spouse −0.01 −0.08, 0.06
Number of close children 0.01 −0.02, 0.05
Number of close other family 0.02 −0.02, 0.05
Number of close friends 0.02 −0.02, 0.06
Positive social support from spouse 0.04 −0.02, 0.10
Positive social support from children 0.06 0.02, 0.10*
Positive social support from other family 0.01 −0.02, 0.05
Positive social support from friends 0.03 −0.01, 0.07
Social strain from spouse −0.05 −0.13, −0.02
Social strain from children −0.03 −0.08, 0.02
Social strain from other family 0.00 −0.03, 0.02
Social strain from friends 0.01 −0.02, 0.05
Volunteer
0 h/year Reference Reference
0–49 h/year 0.04 −0.02, 0.10
50–99 h/year 0.00 −0.09, 0.09
100–199 h/year 0.08 −0.00, 0.17
>200 h/year 0.07 −0.03, 0.17
Helping friends/neighbors/relatives
0 h/year Reference Reference
1–49 h/year 0.03 −0.03, 0.09
50–99 h/year 0.02 −0.05, 0.10
100–199 h/year 0.05 −0.05, 0.15
>200 h 0.10 0.00, 0.19*
Religious service attendance
Not at all Reference Reference
<1×/week 0.03 −0.03, 0.10
>1×/week 0.00 −0.06, 0.06
Social status ladder 0.08 0.04, 0.11**
Change in social status ladder
Moved down Reference Reference
No change 0.08 ‐0.05, 0.20
Moved up 0.10 ‐0.01, 0.20
In labor force 0.09 0.02, 0.15**

Notes: The analytic sample was restricted to those who had participated in the pre‐baseline wave (2006 or 2008). Multiple imputation was performed to impute missing data on the exposures, covariates, and outcome. Candidate antecedents were assessed, one at a time, in wave 2 (2010/2012), and the outcome (sense of control) was assessed in wave 3 (2014/2016). The following covariates were controlled for at wave 1 (2006/2008): sociodemographic characteristics (age, sex, race/ethnicity, marital status, income, total wealth, level of education, health insurance, geographic region), personality factors (openness, conscientiousness, extraversion, agreeableness, neuroticism), childhood abuse, and all of the predictor variables, including health behaviors (physical activity, smoking, heavy drinking, sleep problems), physical health (heart disease, cancer, stroke, arthritis, hypertension, overweight/obese, diabetes, lung disease, chronic pain, hearing, eyesight, self‐rated health, physical functioning limitations, cognitive impairment), social factors (living with spouse, frequency of contact with children, frequency of contact with other family, frequency of contact with friends, loneliness, closeness with spouse, number of close children, number of close other family, number of close friends, positive social support from spouse, positive social support from children, positive social support from friends, positive social support from other family, social strain from spouse, social strain from children, social strain from other family, social strain from friends, religious service attendance, volunteering, helping friends/neighbors/relatives, perceived social status, change in perceived social status), psychological well‐being factors (life satisfaction, positive affect, purpose in life, optimism, health mastery, financial mastery), psychological distress (depressive symptoms, hopelessness, negative affect, anxiety, trait anger, state anger, daily discrimination, major discrimination, cynical hostility, stressful life events, financial strain), in labor force), and pre‐baseline values of the outcome (sense of control). All continuous candidate antecedents were standardized (mean = 0; standard deviation = 1). An exposure‐wide analytic approach was used, and a separate model for each exposure was run. Higher scores indicate higher sense of mastery. The p value cutoff for Bonferroni correction is p = .05/59 predictors = p < .00084.

Abbreviations: CI, confidence interval; RR, risk ratio.

*

p < .05 before Bonferroni correction.

**

p < .01 before Bonferroni correction.

***

p < .05 after Bonferroni correction.