Table 2.
Age | DSs* | PEs* | Wald tests | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
DSs | PEs | Common effect t stat. (p val.) |
||||||
OR | 95% CI | OR | 95% CI | Time effects t stat. (p val.)a |
Time effect t stat. (p val.)b |
12 years 18 yearsc |
||
Socio-demographic | ||||||||
Female | 12 | 1.58 | [1.36 1.84] | 1.14 | [1.00 1.29] | −3.03 (0.002) | −1.64 (0.102) | 3.60 (<0.0001) |
18 | 2.14 | [1.85 2.47] | 1.32 | [1.13 1.54] | 4.81 (<0.0001) | |||
Marital status unmarried | 12 | 1.22 | [0.98 1.51] | 1.32 | [1.11 1.56] | −0.62 (0.534) | −2.02 (0.043) | −0.64 (0.525) |
18 | 1.33 | [1.10 1.60] | 1.69 | [1.37 2.08] | −1.88 (0.060) | |||
Low maternal education | 12 | 1.07 | [0.92 1.25] | 1.19 | [1.04 1.35] | 0.07 (0.946) | −1.78 (0.076) | −1.12 (0.263) |
18 | 1.07 | [0.93 1.23] | 1.41 | [1.20 1.66] | −2.83 (0.005) | |||
Main risk factors | ||||||||
LoC externality (time-varying) | 12 | 1.15 | [1.05 1.25] | 1.26 | [1.18 1.36] | −3.42 (0.001) | −1.72 (0.087) | −1.93 (0.054) |
18 | 1.41 | [1.29 1.53] | 1.41 | [1.26 1.58] | ||||
Social communication (time-varying) | 12 | 1.21 | [1.10 1.33] | 1.08 | [1.00 1.17] | 0.32 (0.751) | −0.6 (0.546) | 1.86 (0.064) |
18 | 1.19 | [1.08 1.30] | 1.13 | [1.01 1.26] | 0.78 (0.433) | |||
DANVA 8 years | 12 | 0.96 | [0.89 1.04] | 0.92 | [0.86 1.00] | 0.49 (0.623) | −1.33 (0.184) | 0.8 (0.426) |
18 | 0.94 | [0.88 1.01] | 0.99 | [0.91 1.07] | −1.01 (0.311) | |||
Emotional triangles | 12 | |||||||
18 | 1.07 | [1.00 1.14] | 1.05 | [0.97 1.13] | 0.34 (0.731) | |||
Confounders | ||||||||
IQ | 12 | 0.90 | [0.83 0.97] | 0.86 | [0.80 0.92] | −1.81 (0.071) | −0.85 (0.398) | 0.92 (0.359) |
18 | 0.98 | [0.91 1.06] | 0.89 | [0.82 0.97] | 1.92 (0.055) | |||
Autistic traits | 12 | 1.08 | [1.00 1.17] | 1.12 | [1.05 1.20] | 0.72 (0.469) | −0.55 (0.583) | −0.84 (0.401) |
18 | 1.04 | [0.97 1.12] | 1.15 | [1.07 1.25] | −2.07 (0.039) |
*Analysis scale is expressed in the standard deviation units, where the scale is transformed to have a mean 0 and SD = 1
aTest of evidence against the null hypothesis that the strength of the association between risk factors and depression modelled separately at each timepoint is equal to the strength of the association between risk factors and depression modelled across timepoints
bTest of evidence against the null hypothesis that the strength of the association between risk factors and psychotic experiences modelled separately at each timepoint is equal to the strength of the association between risk factors and psychotic experiences modelled across timepoints
cTest of evidence against the null hypothesis that the strength of the association between risk factors and the psychopathologies modelled separately at each timepoint is equal to the strength of the association between the risk factors and both psychopathologies modelled together at each timepoint