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. 2022 Nov 17;62(1):681–701. doi: 10.1007/s10943-022-01693-4

Table 4.

Interactive effects of negative religious coping and Asian ethnicity/religious tradition on mental health

Depression Anxiety Stress
Model 1 Model 2 Model 3
B SE B SE B SE
NRC × Ethnicity
NRC × Chinese − .37** .12 − .30* .14 − .33* .14
NRC × Pilipino − .42*** .12 − .36*** .09 − .34** .11
NRC × other − .48*** .12 − .43*** .10 − .49*** .11
NRC × Indian (omitted)
NRC × Religious Tradition
NRC × Buddhism − .23 .20 − .25 .15 − .38* .16
NRC × Hinduism .49*** .13 .30* .13 .37** .14
NRC × Islam .49*** .11 .38*** .10 .38 .13
NRC × other .17 .25 .08 .17 − .03 .22
NRC × mixed .13 .21 − .06 .21 − .08 .19
NRC × none .26 .13 .18 .13 .09 .12
NRC × Christianity (omitted)

N = 330

NRC Negative religious coping

Standard errors are robust

Models include all control variables

*p < 0.05; **p < 0.01; ***p < 0.001