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. 2022 Apr 2;14(7):1491. doi: 10.3390/nu14071491

Table 2.

Spearman’s correlations between mental health, social support, and coping outcomes in food-insecure mothers in Virginia (n = 1029).

1 2,3 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
1 Total Social Support (SS) 1 - - - - - - - - -
2 Interaction SS 1 0.77 * - - - - - - - -
3 Satisfaction SS 1 0.90 * 0.44 * - - - - - - -
4 Tradeoffs—Coping 1 −0.17 * −0.07 −0.20 * - - - - - -
5 Financial—Coping 1 −0.24 * −0.10 −0.28 * 0.61 * - - - - -
6 Rationing—Coping 1 −0.22 * −0.10 −0.26 * 0.55 * 0.66 * - - - -
7 Global Mental Health 1 0.43 * 0.27 * 0.44 * −0.19 * −0.30 * −0.26 * - - -
8 Anxiety 1 −0.35 * −0.16 * −0.38 * 0.41 * 0.41 * 0.40 * −0.62 * - -
9 Depression 1 −0.43 * −0.24 * −0.44 * 0.39 * 0.43 * 0.40 * −0.61 * 0.79 * -

1 Tools used to assess measures: Social Support—Modified Duke Social Support Inventory; Food Coping Strategies—Hunger Coping Scales; Overall Mental Health—Patient Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS) Global Mental 2a Scale v1.2; Anxiety—PROMIS Emotional Distress v1.0—Anxiety—Short Form 4a; Depression—PROMIS Emotional Distress v1.0—Depression—Short Form 4a. 2,* denotes correlations that are significant at the Bonferroni adjusted p-value threshold of 0.0005. 3 denotes that correlation has been presented elsewhere in the table or the correlation between a variable and itself.