33 research outputs found
Child, mother and family characteristics of EDEN cohort study participants (n = 1903).
<p>Child, mother and family characteristics of EDEN cohort study participants (n = 1903).</p
Temperament at 12 months and children’s behavioral scores at age 5.5 years in the EDEN cohort study stepwise linear regression models (n = 1184, 2003–2011 France, β, 95% CI, p-value).
<p>Temperament at 12 months and children’s behavioral scores at age 5.5 years in the EDEN cohort study stepwise linear regression models (n = 1184, 2003–2011 France, β, 95% CI, p-value).</p
Temperament at 12 months and children’s overall behavioral score at age 5.5 years in the EDEN cohort study- moderation analyses.
<p>Temperament at 12 months and children’s overall behavioral score at age 5.5 years in the EDEN cohort study- moderation analyses.</p
Additional file 1 of Health professional’s perception of a smoking cessation intervention among disadvantaged patients participating in a pragmatic randomized trial
Supplementary Material
Risk factors classification.
<p>A and B are the risk factors. O is the outcome. The single/double-headed arrow between A and B indicates a correlation. The solid (or dotted) arrow between a risk factor and O indicates a significant (or insignificant) association adjusting for the other risk factor.</p
Longitudinal model of inattention-hyperactivity symptoms emergence (4<sup>th</sup> step).
<p>*Prenatal tobacco and maternal age at birth were proxies of SES. Italicized coefficients are bivariate correlation coefficients. Bold coefficients are standardized path coefficients. A solid arrow indicates a statistical significance (p<0.05) of the multivariate path coefficient A dotted arrow indicates a bivariate significance that disappears in the multivariate model.</p
Negative childhood events and internalizing symptoms trajectories (French TEMPO study, 1991–2009, n = 1503, multivariate ORs, adjusted for sex, age at baseline and parental depression, 95% CI).
<p>Compared with a trajectory of individuals who reported persistently low internalizing symptoms (n = 1119).</p><p>Negative childhood events and internalizing symptoms trajectories (French TEMPO study, 1991–2009, n = 1503, multivariate ORs, adjusted for sex, age at baseline and parental depression, 95% CI).</p
Specific negative events in childhood and internalizing symptoms trajectories (French TEMPO study, 1991–2009, n = 1503, multivariate ORs adjusted for sex, age at baseline, and parental history of depression, 95% CI).
‖<p>compared with a trajectory of individuals who reported persistently low internalizing symptoms (n = 1119).</p>¶<p>Associations between negative events and internalizing symptoms trajectories were tested in multinomial regression models adjusted for all specific negative childhood events and all covariates.</p><p>Specific negative events in childhood and internalizing symptoms trajectories (French TEMPO study, 1991–2009, n = 1503, multivariate ORs adjusted for sex, age at baseline, and parental history of depression, 95% CI).</p
Negative childhood events and potential covariates associated with internalizing symptoms trajectories (French TEMPO study, 1991–2009, n = 1503, age and sex-adjusted ORs, 95% CI).
‖<p>compared with a trajectory of individuals who reported persistently low internalizing symptoms (n = 1119).</p>†<p>Multinomial regression models were adjusted on sex and age at baseline.</p><p>Negative childhood events and potential covariates associated with internalizing symptoms trajectories (French TEMPO study, 1991–2009, n = 1503, age and sex-adjusted ORs, 95% CI).</p