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. 2018 Jul 23;28(6):630–637. doi: 10.1017/S2045796018000367

Table 2.

Occupational gender ratio and help-seeking from health professionals for mental health, logistic regression model, sample prior to and following propensity score matching with caliper (0.005), by gender

N OR Low CI Upp CI p Value
Males
Unadjusted logistic regression model (n  =  3085)
Occupational gender ratio
 Not male-dominated 1130 1
 Male-dominated 1955 0.62 0.45 0.86 0.004
Adjusted logistic regression (n  =  3085)
Occupational gender ratio
 Not male-dominated 1130 1
 Male-dominated 1955 0.66 0.46 0.95 0.024
Propensity-adjusted logistic regression using matched sample (n  =  3035)
Occupational gender ratio
 Not male-dominated 1108 1
 Male-dominated 1927 0.73 0.52 1.02 0.072
Females
Unadjusted logistic regression model (n  =  3019)
Occupational gender ratio
 Not male-dominated 2543 1
 Male-dominated 476 0.83 0.57 1.21 0.337
Adjusted logistic regression (n  =  3019)
Occupational gender ratio
 Not male-dominated 2543 1
 Male-dominated 476 0.88 0.59 1.33 0.561
Propensity-adjusted logistic regression using matched sample (n  =  2738)
Occupational gender ratio
 Not male-dominated 2284 1
 Male-dominated 454 0.92 0.63 1.36 0.703

Adjusted models include confounders age, household structure, education, country of birth, income and MHI-5 measured in 2012; past help-seeking for mental health problems (2009); outcome (help-seeking for mental health problems) measured in 2013.