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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2020 Jun 9.
Published in final edited form as: Ann Epidemiol. 2019 Mar 28;34:52–57. doi: 10.1016/j.annepidem.2019.03.011

Table 2.

Multiple variable adjusted associations between maternal ethnic discrimination1 and youth cardiometabolic outcomes

BMI MetS z-score Log hsCRP
Beta (95% CI) p-value Beta (95% CI) p-value Beta (95% CI) p-value
Model 1:
Maternal discrimination 0.11(−0.01, 0.23) 0.08 0.01(−0.09, 0.10) 0.89 0.18( 0.04, 0.32) 0.01
Model 2
Maternal discrimination 0.10(−0.03, 0.22) 0.14 −0.01(−0.10, 0.09) 0.91 0.17( 0.04, 0.31) 0.01
1

HSHC/SOL maternal-report discrimination (2008–2011).

Model 1: adjusted for youth’s sex, age, nativity, and national background.

Model 2: Model 1 + mother and household characteristics, including highest parental education, total household income, and mother’s age, language preference, employment/student status, nativity and marital status.

Note: BMI=body mass index; MetS = metabolic syndrome score; hsCRP=high sensitivity C-reactive protein.