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Religious Coping, Ethnicity, and Ambulatory Blood Pressure

Patrick R. Steffen, PhD, Alan L. Hinderliter, MD, James A. Blumenthal, PhD and Andrew Sherwood, PhD

From the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences (P.R.S., J.A.B., A.S.), Duke University Medical Center, Durham; and the Department of Medicine (A.L.H.), University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina.



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Fig. 1. SBP (mean ± SE) in the clinic and during waking and sleeping in African Americans and whites. For purposes of illustration, religious coping was dichotomized into low and high groups by use of a median split. Means were adjusted for the demographic covariates.

 


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Fig. 2. DBP (mean ± SE) in the clinic and during waking and sleeping in African Americans and whites. For purposes of illustration, religious coping was dichotomized into low and high groups by use of a median split. Means were adjusted for the demographic covariates.

 





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