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One health habit, nutritional status or obesity, was a significant predictor. Alcohol consumption was not significant (p<.12), but showed an inverse relationship to physical health, consistent with the logistic regression.

Religious and professional group membership varied randomly, indicating a significant contextual effect on health outcome. This meant that the effect of specific formal networks on individual physical health was different in some urban areas than in others, after controlling for significant covariates. Although formal and informal networks are hypothesized to have a positive relationship to health, the Russian context may have cultural aspects which account for the absence and even reversal in expected results, and will be discussed later.