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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2023 Feb 1.
Published in final edited form as: Biol Psychiatry. 2021 Aug 17;91(3):273–282. doi: 10.1016/j.biopsych.2021.08.003

Figure 4. Sexual trauma experience was associated with increased body weight.

Figure 4.

(A) Sexual trauma was associated with an increased body weight in adulthood, regardless of the age at which sexual trauma occurred (t(83) = 2.1930, p = 0.0311, η2 = 0.0548; F(3, 81) = 2.5010, p = 0.0652, η2 = 0.0848). (B) There was no significant association of sexual trauma with waist circumference (t(77) = 1.9, p = 0.0612, η2 = 0.0448; F(3, 75) = 1.339, p = 0.2680, η2 = 0.0508). (C) Systolic (t(84) = 0.8107, p = 0.4199, η2 = 0.0078; F(3, 82) = 0.5079, p = 0.6779, η2 = 0.0182) and (D) diastolic (t(84)=1.380, p = 0.1714, η2 = 0.0221; F(3, 82) = 1.003, p = 0.3958, η2 = 0.0354) blood pressure were not associated with prior experience of sexual trauma. NST – no sexual trauma; ST – sexual trauma; #p < 0.05 for t-test between NST and ST