Table 4.
Associations of employment with outcomes of depression and life satisfaction in people with visual impairment (N = 574), estimated using gamma Generalized Linear Models for depression and Heterogeneous Choice Models for life satisfaction
| Mean (SD) | Unadjusted Exp(beta) (95% CI)ab | p-value | Adjusted Exp(beta) (95% CI)abc | p-value | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Depression | |||||
| Not employed | 6.5 (6.1) | Reference | Reference | ||
| Employed | 4.6 (4.7) | 0.70 (0.60, 0.83) | < 0.001 | 0.80 (0.67, 0.96) | 0.02 |
| Life satisfaction | |||||
| Not employed | 6.4 (2.2) | Reference | Reference | ||
| Employed | 7.3 (1.7) | 1.97 (1.52, 2.56) | < 0.001 | 1.85 (1.32, 2.59) | < 0.001 |
Exp exponentiated, CI confidence interval; a the exponentiated betas for depression can be interpreted as percentage difference in mean scores, whereas the exponentiated betas for life satisfaction can be interpreted as odds ratios; b higher scores on depression indicates more depressive symptoms, whereas higher scores on life satisfaction indicates higher life satisfaction; c adjusted for gender, age (years: 18–35, 36–50, 51–67), education (years: < 13, ≥ 13), marital status (married/cohabitant, other), municipal income level (low, moderate, high), onset-age of vision loss (continuous), severity of vision loss (moderate, severe/blind), and having other impairments (no, yes)