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. 2022 Nov 18;46(3):417–428. doi: 10.1007/s10865-022-00373-8

Table 2.

Correlations among predictor variables and health-related outcome measures (studies 1 and 2)

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
1. CDC HRQOL − 0.47*** 0.35*** 0.19*** 0.29*** − 0.15*** − 0.16*** 0.02 − 0.01 − 0.06*
2. Physical Functioning − 0.41*** − 0.32*** − 0.18*** − 0.23*** 0.10* − 0.19*** − 0.01 − 0.03 0.16***
3. Unpred ictability 0.46*** − 0.58*** 0.49*** 0.69*** − 0.19*** − 0.17*** − 0.09* 0.09* − 0.17***
4. Poverty 0.28*** − 0.21*** 0.54*** 0.44*** − 0.19*** 0.04 − 0.00 0.05 − 0.06
5. ACEs 0.44*** − 0.36*** 0.67*** 0.41*** − 0.16*** − 0.08 0.08* 0.10* − 0.05
6. Annual Income − 0.11* 0.16** − 0.21*** − 0.20*** − 0.24*** 0.05 0.03 − 0.19*** 0.04
7. Age 0.08 − 0.29*** 0.22*** 0.11* 0.23*** 0.11* 0.07 − 0.11* 0.08
8. Gender 0.02 0.16** − 0.17*** − 0.05 − 0.02 − 0.05 − 0.20*** 0.03 0.07
9. Race − 0.05 0.01 − 0.02 − 0.04 − 0.01 − 0.17*** − 0.04 0.02 0.00
10. Ethnicity 0.07 − 0.18*** 0.17*** 0.12* 0.12* − 0.08 − 0.02 − 0.01 − 0.05

Study 1 (N = 440) is below the diagonal; Study 2 (N = 557) is above the diagonal. Gender: 1 = Male, 2 = Female; Race: 0 = non-Black/African American, 1 = Black/African American, Ethnicity: 0 = non-Hispanic, 1 = Hispanic. Correlations with race, ethnicity, and gender reflect Pearson point biserial correlations. ***p < 0.001, **p < 0.01, *p < 0.05