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. 2020 Sep 18;21(103):248–257. doi: 10.4103/nah.NAH_15_20

Table 3.

Mediation models of the relationship between road traffic noise (LAeq) and mental ill-health through noise annoyance

Continuous symptoms score Dichotomized symptoms score


Depression Anxiety Depression(PHQ-9 ≥ 10) Anxiety(GAD-7 ≥ 10)




β (95% CI) β (95% CI) OR (95% CI) OR (95% CI)
Total effect 0.13 (−1.20, 1.45) 0.34 (−1.02, 1.70) 0.86 (0.39, 1.93) 1.16 (0.45, 2.99)
Direct effect −0.17 (−1.51, 1.17) −0.02 (−1.39, 1.36) 0.71 (0.31, 1.61) 0.93 (0.35, 2.46)
Indirect effect 0.30 (0.01, 0.71) * 0.35 (0.06, 0.76) * 1.20 (1.03, 1.50) * 1.20 (1.01, 1.52) *

Note. Abbreviations: GAD-7–Generalized Anxiety Disorder 7-item, LAeq − equivalent daytime road traffic noise level, PHQ-9–Patient Health Questionnaire 9-item.The models are adjusted for gender, age, nationality, income adequacy, population density, and university faculty.Effect estimates of LAeq are reported per 5 dB(A) increase. Coefficients are unstandardized linear regression coefficients (β) and odds ratios (OR) with their 95% confidence intervals (CI). The indirect effects were tested using the percentile bootstrap 95% CI (based on 5000 resamples). Statistically significant associations (P-value<0.05) are denoted by an asterisk (*).