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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2009 Sep 24.
Published in final edited form as: Addiction. 2008 Aug;103(8):1283–1293. doi: 10.1111/j.1360-0443.2008.02234.x

Table 3.

Effects of Social Stressors on Changes in Psychological Distress and Problem Drinking among Women in Poverty (N=392)

Predictors Problem Drinking Model 1 Psychological Distress Model 2 Problem Drinking Model 3
AOR 95% CI Coeff. SE AOR 95% CI
At time, T-1
Psychological distress -- -- 0.632*** (0.033) -- --
Problem drinking 4.68*** (2.09, 10.5) -- -- 6.28*** (3.04,13.0)
At time, T
Neighborhood disorder 1.94** (1.24, 3.03) 0.130*** (0.030) 1.55 (0.98, 2.45)
Stressful life events 1.27** (1.08, 1.50) 0.065*** (0.013) 1.13 (0.95,1.35)
Income, logged 0.99 (0.76, 1.29) −0.028* (0.014) 1.04 (0.81,1.33)
Psychological distress -- -- -- -- 2.69*** (1.77,4.08)
*

p< .05,

***

p < .001

Unweighted N, results are weighted. Adjusted odds ratios with 95% confidence intervals are shown for dichotomized outcomes, unstandardized coefficients with standard errors are shown for a continuous outcome. Control variables not shown above include fixed covariates (race/ethnicity, education, marital status) and time-varying covariates (number of children at home, weekly drug use, wave of interview). The percent reduction in the AOR may be computed by (AOR model 1 – AOR model 3)/(AOR model 1 – 1) [71].