Skip to main content
. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2018 May 1.
Published in final edited form as: Psychol Trauma. 2016 Oct 13;9(3):370–378. doi: 10.1037/tra0000202

Table 3.

Between-group Differences in Psychopathology Symptoms and Risky Behaviors for the 4-classes and Overall Sample

Class 1 (n = 91) Class 2 (n = 61) Class 3 (n = 31) Class 4 (n = 27) Overall Sample (n = 210)

M (SD) M (SD) M (SD) M (SD) M (SD) F np2
PTSS 12.22 (8.30)a 21.47 (9.69)b 27.74 (12.30)c 21.22 (7.73)cbd 18.24 (10.93) 27.02*** .29
Depression Symptoms 19.59 (10.05)a 26.48 (10.73)b 35.61 (13.47)c 27.63 (8.88)bd 24.90 (12.02) 19.28*** .22
Drug Problemsa 1.19 (1.85)a 1.21 (2.38)ab 2.59 (2.61)c 2.52 (2.89)cd 1.57 (2.34) 5.93** .09
Alcohol Problems 3.52 (5.30)a 4.51 (5.52)ab 8.00 (10.22)bc 5.86 (8.04)abcd 4.91 (6.92) 2.88* .05
DSH Frequencyb 7.32 (40.12)a 6.93 (23.56)ab 35.20 (94.02)bc 12.39 (36.50)cd 11.86 (48.61) 10.43* --
DSH Versatility 0.44 (0.93)a 0.52 (1.03)ab 1.06 (1.59)abc 1.11 (1.58)bcd 0.64 (1.19) 4.19** .06
HIV-risk Severitya+ 0.07 (0.26)a 0.19 (0.40)ab 0.35 (0.49)bc 0.31 (0.47)abcd 0.22 (0.53) 4.23** .06

Note. PTSS = posttraumatic stress symptoms. DSH = deliberate self-harm.

a

Square-root transformed.

b

Kruskal-Wallis H test.

+

HIV-risk severity was assessed among the subsample of HIV-negative women (n = 193). Means that do not share subscripts differ by p < .05 based on post-hoc Bonferroni pairwise comparisons.

*

p ≤ .05.

**

p ≤ .01.

***

p ≤ .001.