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. 2014 May;104(5):e62–e69. doi: 10.2105/AJPH.2013.301805

TABLE 1—

Comparison of Sociodemographic Characteristics for Mothers of Adolescents in Actual 1999, Weighted 1999, and Actual 2010 Samples From Minneapolis–St Paul, MN: Project EAT

Characteristic 1999 Sample, No. (%) Weighted 1999 Sample, No. (%) 2010 Sample, No. (%) Pa
Ethnicity/raceb .67
 White 373 (46.5) 247 (30.8) 662 (29.7)
 Black 186 (23.2) 232 (28.9) 630 (28.2)
 Hispanic 76 (9.5) 115 (14.3) 371 (16.6)
 Asian 107 (13.3) 161 (20.1) 438 (19.7)
 Mixed/other 60 (7.5) 47 (5.9) 129 (5.8)
Highest household education .8
 Did not finish high school 87 (10.9) 167 (20.8) 512 (23.0)
 Finished high school 185 (23.1) 181 (22.6) 485 (21.8)
 Some college 288 (35.9) 232 (28.9) 629 (28.2)
 Finished college 127 (15.8) 146 (18.3) 398 (17.8)
 Advanced degree 115 (14.3) 76 (9.4) 206 (9.2)

Note. Project EAT = Eating and Activity in Teens. The weighted 1999 sample used inverse probability weighting based on the odds of being in the 2010 sample given the demographics. Weighting was done to allow for an examination of secular trends in fast-food restaurant use independent of demographic shifts in the population (see text in Statistical Analysis section). Both the unweighted and weighted 1999 demographics are provided for ease of comparison.

a

P values are presented for differences between the weighted 1999 and 2010 samples, based on the χ2 test for ethnicity/race and household education.

b

Mothers could choose more than 1 ethnic/racial category; those responses indicating multiple categories were coded as mixed/other. Because there were few participants who identified themselves as Hawaiians, Pacific Islanders, or Native Americans, these participants were also included in the mixed/other category.