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. 2021 Apr 7;77(2):357–364. doi: 10.1093/gerona/glab099

Figure 4.

Figure 4.

Relationships between race/ethnicity status, cumulative stress exposures, and episodic memory.Notes: aTotal effects of race/ethnicity status on episodic memory, adjusting for age, sex, and sample. bAssociations between race/ethnicity status on cumulative stress exposures, adjusting for age, sex, and sample. cAssociations between cumulative stress exposures and episodic memory, adjusting for age, sex, race/ethnicity status, sample, education, income, spousal status, parental status, working status, and chronic conditions. dMarginal structural model evaluating the controlled direct effect of race/ethnicity status on episodic memory. eGeneralized estimating equations with identity link and normal distribution were used in all models to adjust for clustering by family and were calculated using SAS PROC GENMOD. fResults were generated from 20 multiply imputed datasets.