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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2021 Apr 9.
Published in final edited form as: Sex Transm Dis. 2020 Sep;47(9):617–624. doi: 10.1097/OLQ.0000000000001232

Table 2.

Assessment of Factors Confounding the Associations between High Perceived Stress and Sexually Transmitted Infection and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease among Adult Women (Aged 24–34 Years)

% Change in PR without Age % Change in PR without Education % Change in PR without Poverty in Young Adulthood % Change in PR without Poverty in Adulthood % Change in PR without Childhood Trauma % Change in PR without History of CJI % Change in PR without IPV % Change in PR without Discrimination % Change in PR without Depression in Adolescence % Change in PR without Depression in Young Adulthood % Change in PR without Neurotic Personality Traits
Past Year Chlamydiaa
 White −6.6 −1.2 −70.8 −33.9 −30.4 −36.1 −32.1 −20.8 −38.1 −30.4 −75.0
 Black −0.4 0.9 −15.8 0.4 −16.7 −0.9 −15.3 −8.1 −3.6 −12.2 −16.7
Past Year Curable STIb
 White −3.2 −2.2 −100.0 −32.3 −53.8 −36.6 −52.7 −43.6 −36.6 −50.5 −107.5
 Black −0.6 −1.9 −4.4 1.3 −6.3 −0.6 −3.1 −4.4 −1.3 −3.1 −6.3
Lifetime PIDc
 White −9.8 −1.8 −83.9 −19.6 −66.1 −22.3 −66.1 −32.1 −25.0 −59.8 −96.4
 Black -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --

Abbreviations: PR = Prevalence Ratio; CJI = Criminal Justice Involvement; IPV = Intimate Partner Violence; STI = Sexually Transmitted Infection; PID = Pelvic Inflammatory Disease

a

Past Year Chlamydia Original Adjusted Estimates: White women APR=1.68; Black women APR=2.22

b

Past Year Curable STI Original Adjusted Estimates: White women APR=0.93; Black women APR=1.59

c

Lifetime PID Original Adjusted Estimate: White women APR=1.12