Table 4.
Main effects of sexual orientation, race, HIV status, any homelessness within previous 6 months, and time (representing baseline, 1 year, and 2 year follow-up) with age as a covariate, predicting psychiatric diagnoses at baseline, 1, and 2 year follow-up from Generalized Estimating Equations for homeless and unstably housed adult women living in San Francisco, CA, with White race, HIV- status, heterosexual orientation, and no time homeless in previous 6 months as reference, covarying age.
| Mood adjOR (95%CI)a | Anxiety adjOR (95%CI)a | Substance adjOR (95%CI)a | Total sum of Diagnoses B (95% CI) b | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Non-White race | .70 (.43, 1.12) | 0.98 (0.60, 1.59) | 0.37 (0.18, 0.77)** | −0.69 (−1.86, 0.47) |
| HIV-infected | 1.06 (0.69, 1.63) | 1.21 (0.77, 1.90) | 1.81 (1.02, 3.22)* | 1.28 (0.19, 2.36)* |
| Lesbian | 1.39 (0.59, 3.24) | 1.81 (0.68, 4.80) | 1.75 (0.56, 5.53) | 1.92 (−0.16, 3.99) |
| Bisexual | 1.93 (1.01, 3.67)* | 0.73 (0.40, 1.31) | 3.05 (1.09, 8.56)* | 2.10 (0.61, 3.60)** |
| Homeless in previous 6 months | 1.33 (.90, 1.97) | 1.52 (1.00, 2.29)* | 1.09 (0.65, 1.83) | 0.47 (−0.18, 1.12) |
| Time | 0. 90 (0.81, 1.00) | 0.99 (0.89, 1.10) | 0.97 (0.84, 1.11) | −0.09 (−0.26, 0.08) |
These models had binary outcome variables, thus confidence intervals that do not cover 1 reflect p values less that .05
These models had continuous outcome variables thus confidence intervals that do not cover 0 reflect p values less that .05
p<.05,
p<.01