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Table 2 The effect of military (versus civilian) and perceived physical health on enacted stigma

From: Stigma doesn’t discriminate: physical and mental health and stigma in Canadian military personnel and Canadian civilians

Predictor

Model 1

Model 2a

Model 3b

O.R.

95% C.I.

p

O.R.

95% C.I.

p

O.R.

95% C.I.

p

Population

6.67

[2.17; 20.51]

.001

5.70

[1.73; 18.88]

.004

5.95

[1.67; 21.09]

.006

Physical Health

0.89

[0.52; 1.51]

.66

0.81

[0.47; 1.40]

.46

0.86

[0.50; 1.49]

.59

Mental Health

0.79

[0.53; 1.19]

.26

0.78

[0.51; 1.19]

.25

0.84

[0.61; 1.45]

.79

Population x Physical Health

0.47

[0.26; 0.87]

.02

0.52

[0.28; 0.98]

.04

0.52

[0.27; 0.99]

.05

Population x Mental Health

0.85

[0.52; 1.39]

.52

0.87

[0.53; 1.45]

.60

0.87

[0.52; 1.46]

.61

Mental Health x Physical Health

0.91

[0.74; 1.11]

.34

0.93

[0.76; 1.14]

.50

0.92

[0.75; 1.13]

.43

Population x Mental Health x Physical Health

1.19

[0.93; 1.51]

.15

1.16

[0.91; 1.48]

.24

1.17

[0.91; 1.50]

.21

  1. aAdjusted for socio-demographic characteristics: sex, age, marital status, education, ethnicity, income
  2. bAdjusted for socio-demographic characteristics, disability, and mental health: depression, distress, alcohol dependence, panic disorder, social phobia and suicidal ideation