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. 2014 Feb 21;77(3):571–577. doi: 10.1111/bcp.12224

Table 2.

Differences between non-users, low dose users, intermediate dose users and high dose users on RT as analyzed in 2823 NESDA participants

No BZD Low dose ≤0,5 DDD Intermediate dose >0.5–1 DDD High dose >1 DDD
n = 2404 n = 288 n = 74 n = 57
Mean (95% CI) Mean (95% CI) Mean (95% CI) Mean (95% CI) P
Unadjusted 0.95 (0.94, 0.96) 1.03 (1.00, 1.06) 1.11 (1.04, 1.18) 1.19 (1.11, 1.29) <0.001
Adjusted 0.96 (0.95, 0.97) 0.97 (0.95, 0.99) 0.99 (0.95, 1.05) 1.03 (0.97, 1.10) 0.01

1 DDD was defined as 10 mg diazepam equivalents day−1. The adjusted analysis was adjusted for sociodemographic characteristics (gender, age, education level), health indicators (alcohol intake and presence of a somatic disease), severity of psychopathology (BAI and IDS-mc), daily dose of used antidepressants, duration of BZD use and number of mistakes made in the IAT. P was obtained by ancova (analysis for linear trend). Significance was inferred at P < 0.05. BZD, benzodiazepines; CI, confidence interval; DDD, defined daily dose; RT, reaction time.