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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2013 Sep 27.
Published in final edited form as: AIDS Behav. 2011 Jan;15(1):172–178. doi: 10.1007/s10461-010-9752-6

Table 2.

Separate multivariate models of demographic, psychopathology and sexual-related factors associated with exposure to sexual traumas (n = 732)

Wald χ2 (df; P value) AOR (95% CI) P value
Demographic model 32.48 (df = 8; P < .0001)
 Age (above sample mean) .88 (.63–1.23) ns
 African American .73 (.49–1.09) ns
 Never married .57 (.41–.79) .001
 Poor health 2.71 (1.33–5.53) .01
 No diploma/GED 1.36 (.99–1.87) ns
 Employed .80 (.55–1.17) ns
 Homeless 1.58 (1.11–2.24) .01
 Receive welfare .84 (.61–1.14) ns
Psychopathology model 69.35 (df = 7; P < .0001)
 Never married .72 (.48–1.07) ns
 Poor health status 2.51 (1.04–6.05) .04
 Homeless 1.43 (.93–2.21) ns
 Depression disorder (lifetime) 2.48 (1.60–3.82) <.0001
 Antisocial personality disorder 3.03 (1.74–5.29) <.0001
 Alcohol dependence (lifetime) 1.08 (.72–1.62) ns
 Cocaine dependence (lifetime) 1.46 (.96–2.21) ns
Sexual risk model 88.10 (df = 5; P < .0001)
 Poor health 2.33 (1.11–4.90) .03
 Depression 2.45 (1.73–3.48) <.0001
 Antisocial personality disorder 2.32 (1.50–3.58) .0002
 Lifetime sex trading 2.31 (1.65–3.26) <.0001
 Lifetime STD history 1.18 (.83–1.66) ns