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. 2016 Aug 15;11(5):1406–1414. doi: 10.1177/1557988316664508

Table 3.

Odds Ratios and 95% Confidence Intervals Identifying Differences in Health Status and Disability Outcomes by Non-Hispanic White Men and Asian American Sub ethnic Groups of Men.

Ethnicity Fair or poor self-reported health Diabetes mellitus High blood pressure Disability
Non-Hispanic White 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00
Chinese 1.18 [0.88, 1.58] 0.99 [0.69, 1.44] 1.00 [0.76, 1.33] 0.42 [0.31, 0.57]
Japanese 0.76 [0.51, 1.18] 1.21 [0.86, 1.70] 1.17 [0.90, 1.52] 0.53 [0.39, 0.73]
Korean 1.36 [0.83, 2.23] 1.65 [1.07, 2.55] 1.32 [0.91, 1.90] 0.45 [0.27, 0.74]
Filipino 1.21 [0.87, 1.67] 2.24 [1.26, 4.00] 1.74 [1.31, 2.32] 0.85 [0.64, 1.13]
Vietnamese 2.57 [1.84, 3.59] 1.25 [0.79, 1.98] 1.43 [1.08, 1.89] 1.14 [0.81, 1.60]
Other Asian American 0.80 [0.56, 1.14] 1.95 [1.33, 2.87] 0.72 [0.57, 0.92] 0.65 [0.48, 0.88]

Note. Model is multivariate logistic regression. Data are from the California Health Interview Survey, 2007, 2009, and 2011-2012. Reference group is non-Hispanic Whites. Other Asian American category includes the following: Bangladeshi, Burmese, Cambodian, Hmong, Indian, Indonesian, Laotian, Malaysian, Pakistani, Sri Lankan, Taiwanese, Thai, Other Asian American (self-specified). Model adjusts for age, marital status, educational attainment, annual household income, insurance status, nativity, spoken English proficiency, and obesity.