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. 2021 Jul 3;18(13):7146. doi: 10.3390/ijerph18137146

Table 2.

Results of multiple regression analyses with stress and exhaustion as dependent variables.

Perceived Stress Exhaustion
Variables B SE B β ΔR2 R2 B SE B β ΔR2 R2
Step 1: Demographics 0.043 *** 0.043 *** 0.046 *** 0.046 ***
Gender a   0.06 0.06   0.02   0.07 0.04   0.04
Age −0.01 0.00 −0.13 *** −0.01 0.00 −0.09 ***
Marital status b −0.13 0.08 −0.04 −0.07 0.06 −0.03
Step 2: Loneliness   0.53 0.06   0.27 *** 0.151 *** 0.194 ***   0.42 0.04   0.29 *** 0.164 *** 0.210 ***
Step 3: Resilience −0.46 0.04 −0.33 *** 0.105 *** 0.299 *** −0.39 0.03 −0.38 *** 0.134 *** 0.344 ***
Step 4: Social belonging   0.04 0.03   0.03 0.000 0.299 ***   0.02 0.02   0.02 0.000 0.344 ***
Step 5: Org. support −0.18 0.04 −0.12 *** 0.012 *** 0.311 *** −0.13 0.03 −0.11 *** 0.011 *** 0.355 ***
Step 6: Interaction terms 0.007 ** 0.318 *** 0.010 *** 0.365 ***
Loneliness * resilience   0.09 0.03   0.08 **   0.09 0.02   0.11 ***
Loneliness * s. belonging −0.15 0.03 −0.02   0.00 0.02   0.00
Loneliness * org. support −0.05 0.03 −0.05 * −0.01 0.02 −0.01

Note. a Gender: 1 = men, 2 = other than men. b Marital status: 1 = in relationship, 2 = no relationship. B = unstandardized beta-coefficient from the final step, SE B = standard error of the unstandardized beta-coefficient, β = standardized beta-coefficient from the final step, ΔR2 = change in explanation rate in each step, R2 = explanation rate. * p < 0.05, ** p < 0.01, *** p < 0.00.