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Table 6 Liner regression analysis for Big Five personality associated with family health

From: The association between smoking and family health with the mediation role of personality among Chinese people: nationwide cross-sectional study

Big Five personality

Unadjusted

Adjusted 1

Adjusted 2

Adjusted 3

β(95%CI)

P value

β(95%CI)

P value

β(95%CI)

P value

β(95%CI)

P value

Extraversion

0.038(0.035,0.041)

 < 0.001

0.037(0.034,0.041)

 < 0.001

0.036(0.033,0.040)

 < 0.001

0.028(0.025,0.032)

 < 0.001

Agreeableness

0.074(0.071,0.077)

 < 0.001

0.073(0.070,0.076)

 < 0.001

0.073(0.071,0.076)

 < 0.001

0.064(0.061,0.067)

 < 0.001

Conscientiousness

0.063(0.060,0.067)

 < 0.001

0.064(0.061,0.067)

 < 0.001

0.064(0.061,0.067)

 < 0.001

0.048(0.045,0.051)

 < 0.001

Nervousness

0.042(0.039,0.045)

 < 0.001

0.045(0.042,0.048)

 < 0.001

0.047(0.044,0.050)

 < 0.001

0.027(0.024,0.031)

 < 0.001

Openness

0.032(0.029,0.035)

 < 0.001

0.030(0.027,0.033)

 < 0.001

0.026(0.023,0.029)

 < 0.001

0.026(0.023,0.029)

 < 0.001

  1. Logistic regression model was applied to measure the association between family health (independent variable) and Big Five personality (dependent variable)
  2. Adjusted 1: Adjusting for age, gender, and household type
  3. Adjusted 2: Adjusting for age, gender, household type, marital status, education levels, family income, current work status, religion, political landscape, residence, and chronic diseases
  4. Adjusted 3: Adjusting for age, gender, household type, marital, education, income, work status, religion, political, residence, chronic diseases, negative event, depression
  5. P-value less than 0.001 was considered conservative for statistical significance after the Bonferroni correction
  6. β Beta, CI confidence interval