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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2019 Sep 1.
Published in final edited form as: Psychoneuroendocrinology. 2018 May 17;95:74–85. doi: 10.1016/j.psyneuen.2018.05.025

Table 3.

Correlation coefficients between predictor variables and cord blood relative telomere length for entire sample and split by infant sex

Entire Sample
N = 151
Males
n = 83
Females
n = 68
r p r p r p Z-test
Maternal health in pregnancy
 Maternal smoking during pregnancy −.18 .025 −.28 .011 −.05 .706 −1.423
 Maternal body mass index (BMI), kg/m2 −.12 .155 −.28 .011 .09 .501 −2.263*
Socioeconomic status in pregnancy
 Maternal educational attainment .14 .096 .37 .001 −.12 .335 3.048*
 Annual household income in pregnancy .07 .436 .32 .004 −.22 .072 3.325*
Maternal mental health in pregnancy
 Posttraumatic stress symptoms (PCL-C) −.12 .166 −.22 .056 −.02 .855 −1.220
 Depressive symptoms (continuous, EPDS) .06 .504 −.08 .470 .21 .099 −1.757
 Elevated depressive symptoms (categorical, EPDS) −.08 .317 −.24 .030 .16 .206 −2.432*
Maternal stress exposures in her childhood and in pregnancy
 Physical abuse in childhood (CTQ-SF) −.03 .710 −.03 .797 −.04 .772 0.060
 Emotional abuse in childhood (CTQ-SF) −.05 .569 −.05 .657 −.06 .658 0.060
 Sexual abuse in childhood (CTQ-SF) −.13 .143 −.31 .007 .05 .718 −2.219*
 Total abuse in childhood (CTQ-SF) −.07 .388 −.11 .337 −.04 .770 −0.422
 Stress exposures in pregnancy (CRISYS-R) .05 .516 −.03 .817 −.02 .855 −0.060
Maternal support in her childhood
 Familial emotional support in childhood (CTQ-SF) .24 .004 .34 .003 .13 .284 1.338
Control variables
 Maternal age −.11 .171 −.06 .618 −.18 .132 0.730

Note. PCL-C= Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Checklist-Civilian Version; EPDS = Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale; CTQ-SF = Childhood Trauma Questionnaire, Short Form; CRISYS-R = Crisis in Family Systems-Revised. Telomere length was normally distributed. Pearson’s correlation coefficients were calculated when both variables were continuous and normally distributed; Spearman’s correlation coefficients when both variables were continuous and at least one was non-normally distributed and/or ordinal; point biserial correlations when one variable was dichotomous and the other was continuous; and phi correlation when both variables were dichotomous. Bolded correlation coefficient values are significant at p < .05, two-tailed. Z-test is a result of the transformation of the difference between the correlation coefficients for male and female infants using the Fisher-to-z transformation;

*

indicates that the magnitude of the correlation coefficients was significantly different between male and female infants using a two-tailed test.