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Correlational findings

Study Ambrey et al. (2013): study AU Queensland 2000

Public
45+ aged general public, South East Queensland, Australia, 2000-2001
Survey name
AU-HILDA 2001
Sample
Respondents
N = 923
Non Response
Assessment
Interview: Computer Assisted Telephone Interview (CATI)

Correlate

Authors's Label
Health condition
Our Classification
Distribution
Mild long-term health condition 6.0%; Moderate or severe long-term health condition 16.9%
Operationalization
Long-term health condition, that is a condition that has lasted or is likely to last for more than six months and this condition does not limit the type  or amount of work the respondent can do.
2 severe or moderate condition
1  mild condition
0  no condition (reference)

Observed Relation with Happiness

Happiness Measure Statistics Elaboration / Remarks O-SLu-u-sq-n-11-a OPRC = -.33 p < .001 Moderate or severe long-term health condition (vs no condition)

OPRC's controlled for
- Personal characteristics
- Age
- Gender
- Aboriginal identity
- Immigrant
- English ability
- Marital status
- Parent status
- Number of children
- Education levels
- Employment status
- Household income (ln)
- Importance of religion
- Living years
- Others present
- Personality
- Major city
- Local status
-Environment
- Socio-Economic Indexes for Areas
- PM10 (μg/m3)
- Humidity (%)
- Rainfall (mm)
- Temperature (°C)
- Wind speed (meters/second)
O-SLu-u-sq-n-11-a OPRC = -.27 p < .05 Mild long-term health condition (vs no condition)