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Table 2 Effects of exposure to the bomb explosion, and work factors on subsequent sickness absence

From: Effects of exposure to workplace terrorism on subsequent doctor certified sickness absence, and the modifying role of psychological and social work factors: a combined survey and register study

 

Binomial logistic regressiona

Negative binomial regressiona

OR

95%CI

P-value

RR

95%CI

P-value

Sex female

2.26

[1.78–2.87]

< 0.001

1.33

[1.02–1.73]

0.034

Age

1.05

[0.94–1.17]

0.131

1.13

[1.00–1.26]

0.045

Education:

 More than 16 years

ref.

     

 13–16 years

1.44

[1.10–1.88]

0.008

0.98

[0.733–1.32]

0.915

 Less than 13 years

3.36

[2.34–4.84]

< 0.001

1.07

[0.76–1.51]

0.677

Indirectly exposed

ref.

     

Directly Exposed

1.47

[1.04–2.07]

0.028

1.53

[1.07–2.19]

0.021

Role clarity

0.89

[0.76–1.04]

0.131

0.98

[0.83–1.16]

0.825

Role conflict

1.26

[1.07–1.48]

0.007

1.15

[0.97–1.35]

0.116

Control over decision

0.65

[0.54–0.77]

< 0.001

0.88

[0.74–1.04]

0.124

Control over work pace

0.86

[0.74–1.01]

0.071

0.99

[0.84–1.16]

0.862

Support from superior

0.80

[0.70–0.91]

< 0.001

0.85

[0.75–0.96]

0.011

Support from co-worker

0.77

[0.66–0.90]

< 0.001

0.92

[0.79–1.07]

0.268

  1. OR odds ratio
  2. RR rate ratio
  3. a All work factors were analyzed in separate models adjusted for sex, age, education, and exposure to the bomb explosion