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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2020 Apr 17.
Published in final edited form as: J Health Soc Behav. 2020 Feb 5;61(1):24–42. doi: 10.1177/0022146520901695

Table 3.

Robust linear regression estimates of depressive symptoms and anxiety (n=1,252).

Depressive Symptoms Anxiety
(a) (b) (a) (b)
Focal Variables
 Black −.007 (.034) .066 (.048) −.103 (.050) * .075 (.075)
 GSS (scale) .016 (.002) *** .019 (.003) ***
  Low (reference)
  Middle .143 (.040) *** .255 (.055) ***
  High .362 (.053) *** .460 (.069) ***
Interactions [Black ×…]
 GSS (scale) −.010 (.002) *** −.013 (.003) ***
  Low (reference)
  Middle −.074 (.062) −.195 (.100)
  High −.135 (.065) * −.288 (.107) **
Intercept 1.012 (.143) *** .816 (.150) *** .997 (.217) *** .702 (.220) **
Adjusted R-squared .448 .428 .334 .322

Notes: Unstandardized coefficients are reported with robust standard errors in parentheses. All estimates adjust for covariates, post-stratification weighting, and clustering at the census block group level. GSS=goal-striving stress. Scaled GSS scores are mean-centered.

*

p<.05,

**

p<.01,

***

p<.001 (two-tailed).