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. 2019 Jun 28;16(13):2291. doi: 10.3390/ijerph16132291

Table 3.

Summary of multiple linear regressions predicting the well-being for male and female workers.

Male Female
Model A1 Model A2 Model A3 Model A4 Model B1 Model B2 Model B3 Model B4
β β β β β β β β
Age 0.184 *** 0.177 *** 0.054 ** 0.054 ** 0.186 *** 0.185 *** 0.066 * 0.073 *
Marital Status a 0.066 *** 0.075 *** 0.093 *** 0.092 *** 0.065 0.075 * 0.078 * 0.080 **
Education 0.001 0.013 0.003 0.002 −0.011 0.031 −0.028 −0.013
Occupation a −0.058 *** −0.063 *** −0.050 *** −0.050 ** 0.017 −0.006 0.027 0.018
Economic Status 0.287 *** 0.279 *** 0.178 *** 0.178 *** 0.271 *** 0.235 *** 0.153 *** 0.147 ***
WFC b −0.098 *** 0.010 −0.239 *** −0.081 *
Burnout −0.474 *** −0.477 *** −0.501 *** −0.471 ***
Total R2 0.184 0.193 0.373 0.374 0.147 0.200 0.360 0.366
∆R2 0.009 0.189 0.190 0.053 0.213 0.219
F 155.07 *** 137.27 *** 342.16 *** 293.32 *** 25.80 *** 31.20 *** 70.29 *** 61.59 ***

β denotes standardized regression coefficient. a Not married and white-collar were coded as 0; married and blue-collar were coded as 1. b WFC denotes work-to-family conflict. * p < 0.05; ** p < 0.01; *** p < 0.001.