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. 2018 Sep;104:32–38. doi: 10.1016/j.jpsychires.2018.06.011

Table 3.

Associations between potential protective factors and age-18 psychotic experiences amongst adolescents exposed to poly-victimization.

Protective Factors Poly-victimized adolescents (N = 334)
No Psychotic Experiences
N = 134
M (SD)
Psychotic Experiences
N = 200
M (SD)
Unadjusted OR
(95% CI)
Adjusted ORa
(95% CI)
Physically active at age 18, n (%) 128 (95.5) 178 (89.5) 0.40 (0.15–1.03) 0.48 (0.18–1.26)
Social cohesion at age 13/14 2.2 (0.4) 2.1 (0.6) 0.71 (0.45–1.13) 0.86 (0.52–1.42)
Social support at age 18 20.1 (5.0) 18.1 (5.4) 0.92 (0.88–0.97) 0.93 (0.88–0.98)
a

Adjusted for family socioeconomic status, family psychiatric history, child's gender, age-12 psychotic symptoms, and other mental health problems at age 12. All analyses account for the non-independence of twin observations. CI, confidence interval. IQ, intelligence quotient. M, mean. OR, odds ratio. SD, standard deviation. Bold text indicates p < 0.05.