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. 2013 May 22;3(5):e002053. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2012-002053

Table 1.

Sociodemographic and psychosocial factors of the total sample (N=573)

N (%)
Age groups
 18–29 107 (18.7)
 30–39 138 (24.1)
 40–49 125 (21.8)
 50–59 136 (23.7)
 60–65 67 (11.7)
Partner status
 Single/widowed/divorced 85 (14.9)
 Boyfriend/girlfriend 64 (11.2)
 Married/cohabitant/registered partnership 420 (73.8)
 Heterosexual relationship 477 (83.2)
 Same-sex relationship 7 (1.2)
Educational level (highest)
 University 270 (47.2)
 High school (10–12 years) 211 (36.9)
 Compulsory (≤9 years) 91 (15.9)
Annual income (before tax, SEK)
 0–159999 168 (29.3)
 160000–234999 175 (30.5)
 235000–309999 143 (25.0)
 310000 or more 87 (15.2)
Employment status
 Employed 396 (69.7)
 Student 35 (6.2)
 Retired 47 (8.3)
 Sick leave (more than 3 months) 8 (1.4)
 Parental leave or leave of absence 35 (6.2)
 Unemployed 23 (4.0)
 Other 24 (4.2)
Country of birth
 Sweden 519 (90.6)
 Other Nordic country 15 (2.6)
 Other European country 18 (3.1)
 Country outside Europe 21 (3.7)
Self-rated health
 Very good/good 511 (90.0)
 Neither good nor bad/bad/very bad 57 (10.0)
Grew up in a home where physical violence occurred
 No 542 (94.6)
 Yes/unsure 31 (5.4)

SEK, Swedish kronor.