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. 2015 Apr 21;19(4):625–632. doi: 10.1017/S136898001500097X

Table 1.

Means and standard deviations or frequency distributions for the variables under study, according to sex, in a community-based sample of adults (n 1292), the Netherlands

Women Men
Mean or % sd Mean or % sd
Age (years) 49·88 16·64 52·88 16·83
BMI (kg/m2) 25·55 5·35 25·71 3·91
Marital status (1=yes, 0=no) 55·8 62·0
Education level (%)
Elementary school 9·9 7·7
High school 42·5 33·7
Middle-level applied education 18·6 22·5
Higher professional education 22·7 24·8
University education 6·1 11·2
Emotional eating 2·19 0·77 1·83 0·66
External eating 2·55 0·53 2·55 0·51
Restrained eating 2·97 0·74 2·56 0·77
Intention 3·10 0·93 3·06 0·82
Health concerns (1=yes, 0=no) 67·0 59·9
Appearance concerns (1=yes, 0=no) 69·6 50·8
Unhealthy snack habit strength 2·35 1·30 2·50 1·26
Perceived health consequences 3·14 0·57 3·07 0·59
Unhealthy snack intake (kJ/d) 1289 925 1439 954
Unhealthy snack intake (kcal/d) 308 221 344 228
Fruit and vegetable intake (pieces/d) 1·75 1·53 1·39 1·34

Marital status, health concerns and appearance concerns are dichotomous variables. Percentages for these variables reflect the percentage of participants who responded ‘yes’.