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. 2023 Aug 21;25:e42647. doi: 10.2196/42647

Table 2.

Demographics of the interview group at baseline (month 0; n=10).

Participant number Age (years) Sexual orientation Country of birth Cultural ID Religious ID Educational level Employment (paid) Children Living situation Type of violence and abuse
226 43 Heterosexual Dutch Dutch+Indonesian None or atheism Higher vocational education Yes Yes With children Physical, psychological, and economic
290 46 Heterosexual Dutch Dutch+French None or atheism Higher vocational education No Yes With children Psychological and economic
322 38 Heterosexual United States Dutch+United States None or atheism Vocational education Yes Yes With children Physical, psychological, and economic
422 26 Bisexual Dutch Dutch None or atheism Higher vocational education No No Alone Physical, psychological, sexual, and economic
431a 48 Heterosexual Dutch Dutch None or atheism Higher vocational education Yes No Alone Physical and psychological
457 49 Heterosexual Dutch Dutch None or atheism Vocational education No Yes With children Psychological
501 39 Heterosexual Dutch Dutch Christianity Higher vocational education No Yes With children Physical, psychological, sexual, and economic
545 47 Bisexual Dutch Dutch None or atheism University Yes Yes With children Psychological
629 50 Heterosexual Dutch Dutch None or atheism Vocational education Yes Yes Alone Physical and psychological
647 50 Heterosexual Dutch Dutch Christianity+Hinduism University No Yes With partner and children Physical, psychological, and sexual

aThis participant dropped out during the randomized controlled trial but did participate in the process evaluation interviews.