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. 2017 Aug 11;14(8):904. doi: 10.3390/ijerph14080904

Table 2.

Separate effects of unemployment experience and job insecurity at baseline on depression at follow-up (n = 7073).

Incident Depression
n (%)
Model I
RR (95% CI)
Model II
RR (95% CI)
Model
III RR (95% CI)
Model IV
RR (95% CI)
Unemployment experience in the past (years) Never or short-term 203 (3.17%) 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00
Long-term 41 (6.20%) 1.82 (1.31, 2.54) 1.80 (1.28, 2.52) 1.70 (1.20, 2.39) 1.64 (1.16, 2.31)
Job insecurity in the future (0–100%) None or low 166 (3.06%) 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00
High 78 (4.74%) 1.57 (1.20, 2.04) 1.54 (1.18, 2.02) 1.54 (1.18, 2.01) 1.48 (1.13, 1.92)

Model I: adjustment for age, and gender at baseline; Model II: additional adjustment for marital status, education, income, and contract type at baseline; Model III: additional adjustment for smoking, alcohol consumption, physical exercise, and BMI at baseline; Model IV: additional adjustment for self-rated health at baseline.