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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2018 Dec 20.
Published in final edited form as: Am Sociol Rev. 2017 Oct 12;82(6):1241–1271. doi: 10.1177/0003122417734353

Table 5.

The Effect of Youth Violent Victimization on Competing Risks of Progression to First Cohabitation versus First Marriage (Cox Regression Models)

First Cohabitation
First Marriage
b (SE) HR b (SE) HR
Youth Violent Victimization   .302**a,c (.111) 1.353   .783**b (.225) 2.240
Youth Violent Victimization x Time −.007*** (.002)   .993 −.006* (.003)   .993
N of Eventsd 3,810 905
N of Respondentsd 6, 976

Source: National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health (Add Health), 1994 to 2008.

Note: b = hazard coefficient; SE = standard error; HR = hazard ratio (HR) = exp(b). Estimates are weighted and adjusted for complex survey design. Models also include all the controls listed in Table 3.

a

Joint effects of YVV and YVV x time are statistically significant (Wald χ2, F (2,126.0) = 9.25 p = .0002).

b

Joint effects of YVV and YVV x time are statistically significant (Wald χ2, F (2,125.4) = 6.75, p = .0017).

c

Marginally significant difference (t = 1.917, p = .0553) between the coefficient for cohabitation and the coefficient for marriage.

d

Unweighted N.

*

p < .05;

**

p < .01;

***

p < .001 (two-tailed tests).