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. 2016 Sep 9;4:2050312116666975. doi: 10.1177/2050312116666975

Table 2.

The association between baseline self-rated health (2001) and subsequent all-cause mortality (2001–2004) using logistic regression among 573 men and 927 women.

OR
95% CI
p
OR
95% CI
p
OR
95% CI
p
All
Men
Women
Model 1 Model 2 Model 3
Gender (female) 0.71 0.49–1.02 0.061
Age (years) 1.07 1.05–1.10 <0.001 1.05 1.01–1.09 0.007 1.09 1.06–1.13 <0.001
Race (Blacks) 1.07 0.76–1.51 0.692 0.98 0.56–1.71 0.939 1.16 0.74–1.80 0.520
Education (high school diploma) 0.78 0.55–1.10 0.155 0.94 0.53–1.66 0.831 0.69 0.44–1.08 0.101
Marital status (married) 0.73 0.51–1.04 0.079 0.77 0.44–1.34 0.352 0.72 0.44–1.16 0.179
Current smoking 1.29 0.73–2.28 0.375 1.34 0.61–2.91 0.464 1.17 0.51–2.72 0.712
Drinking (lifetime) 1.21 0.81–1.80 0.347 1.27 0.74–2.17 0.383 1.12 0.62–2.01 0.714
SRH
 Excellent Ref. Ref. Ref. Ref. Ref. Ref. Ref. Ref. Ref.
 Good 1.36 0.72–2.56 0.349 1.31 0.47–3.71 0.606 1.31 0.58–2.95 0.515
 Fair 2.88 1.54–5.41 0.001 3.48 1.28–9.48 0.015 2.49 1.10–5.62 0.028
 Poor 7.27 3.70–14.30 <0.001 13.21 4.49–38.89 <0.001 4.81 2.01–11.52 <0.001

OR: odds ratio; CI: confidence interval; SRH: self-rated health.

SRH treated as an ordinal measure.