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. 2021 Jan 7;270:113687. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2021.113687

Table 2.

Zero-order correlations between key study variables and covariates for the analytic sample (N = 2463).

Variable 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13
1 Follow-up CESD-10
2 Baseline CESD-10 .73**
3 Age -.27** -.29**
4 Health -.19** -.18** -.04
5 Income -.10** -.08** .01 .19**
6 Race/Ethnicity .01 .02 .14** .02 .00
7 Household Size .03 .05** -.23** .05** .29** -.04*
8 USA vs Canada .11** .17** -.06** .00 .02 .04 -.01
9 Self-threat .25** .27** -.06** -.09** -.02 .02 .04* .01
10 Other-threat .24** .26** .04* -.26** -.01 -.02 .05** .02 .35**
11 Financial Insecurity .27** .27** -.11** -.11** -.15** -.03 .07** -.06** .18** .21**
12 Social Isolation .40** .49** -.19** -.07** -.07** .05* −0.02 .14** .10** .10** .17**
13 Occupational Difficulty .29** .31** -.43** .03 .07** -.03 .08** .15** .10** .04* .11** .21**
14 Resource Scarcity .22** .21** -.08** -.12** -.03 .00 .05* -.01 .17** .25** .23** .15** .08**

Note. Phi coefficients for relations between dichotomous variables; point–biserial correlations for relations between a dichotomous and a continuous variable; Pearson correlations for relations between two continuous variables.

*p < .05; **p < .01; ***p < .001.