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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2017 Jan 1.
Published in final edited form as: J Health Care Poor Underserved. 2016;27(2A):120–148. doi: 10.1353/hpu.2016.0052

Table 6.

Negative Binomial Regression Results Predicting the Number of Ambulatory Outpatient Visits Used by African American Women in the 18 Months After Released from Prison (N=161)

Model 6.1
I.R.R.
(95% C.I.)
Model 6.2
I.R.R.
(95% C.I.)
Model 6.3
I.R.R.
(95% C.I.)
Model 6.4
I.R.R.
(95% C.I.)

Predisposing Vulnerable
  Religiosity 1.01
(.83–1.23)
1.00
(.82–1.21)
  Ethnic Community 1.10
(.79–1.52)
1.16
(.82–1.21)
  Gendered Racism Scale 1.02**
(1.01–1.04)
1.02*
(1.00–1.03)
Enabling Traditional
 # Barriers to Community Health Care 1.01
(.94–1.09)
.96
(.89–1.04)
Enabling Vulnerable
 Disability 1.17
(.78–1.76)
.90
(.60–1.36)
Need Traditional
 Health Limits Activity 1.10
(.78–1.56)
1.07
(.75–1.53)
 # Physical Health Problems 1.15**
(1.05–1.25)
1.12*
(1.02–1.23)
Need Vulnerable
  Injection Drug User 1.33
(.73–2.42)
1.43
(.79–2.60)
 HIV/HCV 1.51
(.98–2.32)
1.54*
(1.00–2.36)

−2 log likelihood −486.88 −491.10 −481.27 −478.95
Model χ2 9.19* .74 20.40*** 25.05**
Nagelkerke R2 .01 .01 .02 .03

Notes:

*

p<.05;

**

p<.01;

***

p<.001;

I.R.R. = Incidence Rate Ratio, 95% C.I.=95% Confidence Interval