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. 2020 Mar 5;22(3):e13118. doi: 10.2196/13118

Table 3.

Significant contributions to feeling confused after using electronic health tools.

Significant variablesa Odds ratio (95% CI) P value
Age group (years)

40-49 1.00 Refb

50-59 0.782 (0.698-0.875) <.001

60-69 0.612 (0.537-0.697) <.001

≥70 0.703 (0.520-0.951) .02
Sex

Women 1.00 Ref

Men 0.694 (0.629-0.766) <.001
Self-reported health status

Very bad 1.00 Ref

Good 0.696 (0.489-0.989) .04

Excellent 0.541 (0.374-0.782) .001
Occupation

Full-time worker 1.00 Ref

Retired 0.769 (0.596-0.992) .04
Medical condition currently or in the past

No 1.00 Ref

Yes 1.16 (1.035-1.302) .01
Significant interaction observed between variables having enough friends who could give help and support and enough friends to talk confidentially with 0.690 (0.488-0.976) .04

aThe complete list of variables included in the model is as follows: age group (40-49, 50-59, 60-69, and ≥70), sex (women and men), self-reported health status (very bad, bad, neither good nor bad, good, and excellent), education (primary/partly secondary, upper secondary, tertiary short, and tertiary long), occupation (works full-time, works part-time, unemployed, housekeeping, retired, student or military service, and social benefits receiver), household income (0-250,000 kr / 0-26,605 US, 251,000-450,000 kr / 26,712-47,890 US, 451,000-750,000 kr / 47,996-79,816 US, 751,000-1,000,000 kr / 79,923-106,422 US, and >1,000,000 kr / >106,422 US), lives with a spouse (no and yes), has enough friends to talk confidentially with (no and yes), has enough friends who could give help and support (no and yes), and medical condition currently or in the past (no and yes).

bRef: reference group.