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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2016 Jul 2.
Published in final edited form as: Ethn Health. 2014 Jun 12;20(3):273–292. doi: 10.1080/13557858.2014.921888

Table 4.

Demographic and SES Differences in Attribution of Select Psychotic-Like Symptoms by Race/Ethnicity

Model 1: Supernatural/Spirits/Ghosts Model 2: Spirituality/Religiosity Model 3: Death/Dying Model 4: Premonition
Panel 1: Demographic Differences1
Odds Ratio(95% CI) Odds Ratio(95% CI) Odds Ratio(95% CI) Odds Ratio(95% CI)
n=280 n=182 n=161 n=123
Race/Ethnicity
 African American 1 1 1 1
 Caribbean Black 1.91(0.74,4.95) 1.23(0.51,2.97) 1.03(0.40,2.60) 0.85(0.40,1.81)
 Asian 2.16(0.94,5.01) 0.51(0.21,1.22) 0.34(0.10,1.19) 0.80(0.24,2.66)
 Latino 1.80(1.01,3.20)* 0.45(0.24,0.83)* 0.42(0.20,0.89)* 0.84(0.37,1.89)
Panel 2: Demographic and SES Differences2
Odds Ratio(95% CI) Odds Ratio(95% CI) Odds Ratio(95% CI) Odds Ratio(95% CI)
n=280 n=182 n=161 n=123
Race/Ethnicity
 African American 1 1 1 1
 Caribbean Black 2.15(0.83,5.59) 1.19(0.49,2.89) 0.95(0.36,2.53) 0.80(0.37,1.74)
 Asian 3.24(1.31,8.04)* 0.45(0.18,1.09) 0.30(0.07,1.29) 0.66(0.20,2.21)
 Latino 2.09(1.16,3.78)* 0.46(0.24,0.86)* 0.36(0.17,0.78)* 0.81(0.36,1.83)
*

p < .05

1

Models adjusted for demographic variables: age, gender, marital status, region, birthplace, and type of disorder

2

Models adjusted for demographic variables + SES variables: education level and annual household income

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