Skip to main content
. 2014 Jan 19;2014:595208. doi: 10.1155/2014/595208

Table 6.

Individual leisure activities and gender interactions associated with sleep disturbances, with and without adjusting for confounders.

Model 3a Model 3b
OR 95% CI P value OR 95% CI P value
Gardening 1.50 1.04–2.16 0.032   
Strolling in the country 1.56 1.07–2.29 0.022
Playing chess/cards 1.61 1.09–2.39 0.017 1.43 0.95–2.17 0.090
Home maintenance 2.26 1.17–4.35 0.015 2.09 1.07–4.07 0.031
Home maintenance × gender 0.44 0.20–0.94 0.033 0.33 0.15–0.75 0.008
Gender (women) 3.63 2.15–6.15 <0.001 4.86 2.75–8.61 <0.001
Age cohorts 0.043
 72- and 78-year-olds 0.95 0.61–1.49 0.832
 81 years or older 1.56 0.99–2.46 0.056
General health <0.001
 Good 3.40 2.02–5.73 <0.001
 Poor/fair 7.50 4.27–11.81 <0.001

Note: in Model 3a gardening, strolling in the country, home maintenance, repair cars/machines, and playing chess/cards were entered together with gender and the interactions gardening × gender, strolling in the country × gender, playing chess/cards × gender, repairing cars/machines × gender, and home maintenance × gender. The model explained between 9.2% (Cox and Snell R 2) and 13.7% (Nagelkerke R 2) of the variance, Hosmer and Lemeshow 0.887, chi-square 2.973, (df 7), missing n = 66. Model 3b included gardening, strolling in the country, home maintenance, repair cars/machines, and playing chess/cards, gender, gardening × gender, strolling in the country × gender, playing chess/cards × gender, repairing cars/machines × gender, and home maintenance × gender and was adjusted for age, functional ability, mood, and general health. The model explained between 16.9% (Cox and Snell R 2) and 24.9% (Nagelkerke R 2) of the variance, Hosmer and Lemeshow 0.716, chi-square 5.386, (df 8), missing = 93. Only the last step of the regression analyses is shown in the table.