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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2021 Oct 1.
Published in final edited form as: J Behav Med. 2019 Dec 12;43(5):791–806. doi: 10.1007/s10865-019-00123-3

Table 2.

Bivariate correlations among primary study variables.

Study Variable 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
1. African American 1
2. White/Non-Hispanic −.53** 1
3. Hispanic/Latina −.69** −.24** 1
4. Education −.25** .39** −.04 1
5. Employment −.12* .17** −.01 .34** 1
6. Annual Income −.35** .37** .09 .51** .47** 1
7. Income Meets Basic Needs −.29** .35** .04 .28** .20** .42** 1
8. PTSD .13* −.19** .01 −.22** −.07 −.12* −.20** 1
9. Pain Catastrophizing .12* −.21** .04 −.18** −.11* −.15** −.17** .38** 1
10. Sleep Quantity −.15* .13* .07 .03 −.03 −.06 .09 −.21** −.13* 1
11. Sleep Quality −.13* .14* .04 .06 .01 .01 .11* −.34** −.19** .61** 1
12. Pain Intensity .13* −.21** .02 −.12* −.08 −.14** −.17** .30** .20** −.16** −.21** 1
13. Pain Interference .13* −.21** .02 −.13* −.08 −.14** −.14** .33** .31** −.16** −.26** .70

Note. Significant bivariate correlations are bolded and denoted *p<.05 and **p < .01