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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2019 Mar 15.
Published in final edited form as: Stress Health. 2017 Feb 15;33(5):617–623. doi: 10.1002/smi.2748

Table 3.

Odds of Male Soldier’s Perpetration of IPV with an Increase in His Combat Exposure

Hosmer-Lemeshow Model Fit Sexual – IPV Physical - IPV Injury - IPV
H-L=0.4246 H-L=0.4111 H-L=0.9935
aOR
[95% CI]
b (SE) P Value aOR
[95% CI]
b (SE) P Value aOR
[95% CI]
b (SE) P Value
Combat Exposure^ 1.21
[0.95, 1.54]
0.19 (.12) 0.115 1.01
[0.79, 1.28]
0.01 (.12) 0.959 1.76
[1.28, 2.41]
0.56 (.16) 0.001
PTSD 1.01
[0.98, 1.04]
0.01 (.02) 0.733 1.02
[0.99, 1.05]
0.02 (.01) 0.210 1.00
[0.96, 1.04]
−0.00 (.02) 0.987
Marital Satisfaction 0.99
[0.97, 0.99]
−0.01 (.01) 0.023 1.0
[0.98, 1.01]
−0.00 (.01) 0.423 0.98
[0.96, 0.99]
−0.02 (.01) 0.024
Age 0.94
[0.88, 0.99]
−0.06 (.03) 0.049 0.96
[0.90, 1.01]
−0.04 (.03) 0.140 0.95
[0.87, 1.05]
−0.05 (.05) 0.343
^

10-point increase in combat exposure