6 | 183 Acknowledgements (Dankwoord) Appendix 0.041 0.005 0.002 0.028 0.082 0.077 0.007 0.014 0.057 0.047 0.061 0.059 0.060 0.071 2.980 1.366 0.983 1.004 1.094 0.844 1.048 0.917 1.360 0.908 0.823 1.160 1.113 1.141 1.140 0.000 0.312*** -0.017*** 0.004* 0.090** -0.170* 0.047 -0.086*** 0.308*** -0.096+ -0.195*** 0.148* 0.107+ 0.132* 0.131+ -9.275** 920.741 14 24947 0.071 b STOP PRACTISING A SPORT s.e. Exp(B) CONTROL VARIABLES Female Age Period Educational level Migration background Native Dutch origin (ref.) Non-native of non-Western origin Non-native of Western origin Participation duration Number of sports Intrinsic motivation Sport participation in childhood LIFE EVENTSb , c Beginning work Start living on your own Start cohabiting or getting married Birth of first child Constant Model Chi-square Degrees of freedom Number of person-years Nagelkerke R Square 0.041 0.005 0.002 0.028 0.082 0.077 0.007 0.014 0.057 0.047 0.061 0.059 0.060 0.071 2.980 1.366 0.983 1.004 1.094 0.844 1.048 0.917 1.360 0.908 0.823 1.160 1.113 1.141 1.140 0.000 0.348*** -0.029*** -0.002 0.051 -0.230+ -0.098 -0.051*** 0.169*** 0.059 -0.303*** 0.105 0.252*** 0.061 0.123 -2.213 292.034 14 -13955 0.043 b ENDING A SPORT CLUB MEMBERSHIP s.e. Exp(B) Table B2 Binomial logistic event history analyses of stopping a sport and ending a sport club membership in young adulthood (age 18 to 35); Additional analyses of the effects of the major life events in which anticipation and ‘knock-on’ effects were taken into accounta Source: SportersMonitor 2010 (N = 2272) +p<0.10; *p<0.05; **p<0.01; ***p<0.001 ( two-tailed) a In this additional analysis, we assigned respondents a value of 1 not only in the year they experienced a specific event, but also in the year preceding the event (anticipatory year) and in the year after a life event took place (the knock-on year). We assigned a value of 0 to all other years. b The results of these analyses are largely comparable to the results of the analyses in which the anticipatory and ‘knock-on’ effects were not taken into account, as presented in chapter 3, Table 3.2. Only the effects of the life events are weaker when the anticipation and after effect year are included. This is explainable, because respondents more often stop practising a sport in the year of the occurrence of events than in the year prior to or after experiencing the major life event and the addition of the anticipatory and knock-on year results in less ‘matches’ between the occurrence of life events and stopping a sport or ending a club membership. c Results of a sensitivity-analysis in which the life events were added separately in the models are similar, but the effect of start cohabiting or getting married on ending a club membership is significant as well when added alone (b=0.156; p=0.43).
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