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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2017 Aug 31.
Published in final edited form as: Aging Ment Health. 2015 Mar 16;20(4):432–440. doi: 10.1080/13607863.2015.1020410

Table 4.

Changes over time in depressive caseness among people with CHD and the Healthy group. England 2002-03 to 2006-07

CHD group (N=895) Healthy groupa (N=3,601)

ORc Std. Err. P-value ORc Std. Err. P-value

Fully adjustedb
Women vs Men (2002-03) 1.99 0.48 <0.010 2.31 0.30 <0.001
Women vs Men (2004-05) 1.76 0.44 0.023 1.78 0.23 <0.001
Women vs Men (2006-07) 1.18 0.30 0.517 2.56 0.35 <0.001
Men’s depression (2002-03) 1 1
Men’s depression (2004-05) 1.20 0.24 0.359 1.17 0.14 0.212
Men’s depression (2006-07) 1.06 0.22 0.779 0.85 0.11 0.203
Women’s depression (2002-03) 1 1
Women’s depression (2004-05) 1.06 0.23 0.774 0.90 0.09 0.274
Women’s depression (2006-07) 0.63 0.14 0.024 0.94 0.10 0.551
Between variance 20.65 0.04 19.17 0.02
Within variance 30.62 0.02 24.95 0.01

Notes:

a

People that at baseline had never been diagnosed with CHD, stroke, diabetes, hypertension, pulmonary disease, Alzheimer, Parkinson’s, cancer or any limiting longstanding illness.

b

Adjusted for age, cohabiting status, employment status, education, wealth, smoking status, physical activity, frequency of alcohol consumption, pain, number of limitations with ADLs.

c

Estimated using random intercept models with interaction terms between time and sex. Results based on five imputed data sets.