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Table 5 The interaction between social support and resilience on mental health

From: Effects of sources of social support and resilience on the mental health of different age groups during the COVID-19 pandemic

 

MHI

B

SE

T

P

Total sample

(N = 23,192)

constant

5.00

0.02

239.67

<.001

X1(class2)

0.06

0.02

3.65

<.001

X2(class3)

−0.01

0.01

− 0.59

0.555

X3(class4)

0.03

0.02

2.02

0.043

X4(class5)

0.34

0.02

15.75

<.001

resilience

0.45

0.02

30.00

<.001

X1*resilience

−0.04

0.02

−1.66

0.096

X2*resilience

0.02

0.02

1.06

0.288

X3*resilience

−0.05

0.02

−2.32

0.020

X4*resilience

−0.24

0.02

−10.05

<.001

age

0.003

0.001

2.97

0.003

X1*age

−0.002

0.001

−2.22

0.026

X2*age

−0.001

0.001

−1.10

0.270

X3*age

−0.001

0.001

−0.99

0.323

X4*age

−0.001

0.001

−0.68

0.496

resilience*age

−0.002

0.001

−1.57

0.116

X1*resilience*age

0.002

0.002

1.47

0.142

X2*resilience*age

0.003

0.001

1.97

0.049

X3*resilience*age

0.003

0.002

1.78

0.075

X4*resilience*age

0.000

.002

.043

.966

gender

−0.006

0.01

−0.63

0.531

diseases

−0.09

0.01

−6.88

<.001

R2

0.000

0.153

  1. Note. class 2 = predominantly proximal support class, class 3 = predominantly remote support class, class 4 = moderate social support class, class 5 = high social support class