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. 2010 Oct 8;14(3):135–142. doi: 10.1159/000317497

Table 1.

Characteristics of survey respondents (n = 1,193)

Gender
 Male 30%
 Female 70%
Age
 18–29 9%
 30–39 13%
 40–49 20%
 50–64 36%
 65+ 23%
Education
 Less than high school 8%
 High school 20%
 Some college 28%
 College graduate or beyond 44%
Race
 White/Caucasian 76%
 Black/African American 16%
 Asian American 2%
 American Indian 2%
 Other 4%
Religious affiliation
 Protestant 48%
 Catholic 14%
 Baptist 12%
 Mormon 6%
 Jewish 3%
 Other 3%
 None 9%
Household income previous year (USD)
 <20,000 18%
 20,000–39,999 22%
 40,000–59,999 18%
 60,000–79,999 10%
 ≥80,000 23%
 Not reported 9%
Have a serious or chronic medical condition
 Yes 61%
 No 39%
Would not allow a sample to be used for future genetic research under any circumstances <1%

This represents the 80 participants not in our sub-sample for the analysis reported in this paper, yielding a sample n = 1,113. A chi-squared test confirmed that there were no significant demographic differences between these two samples.