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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2016 Jan 1.
Published in final edited form as: Health Place. 2014 Nov 14;0:24–30. doi: 10.1016/j.healthplace.2014.10.011

Table 1.

Descriptive statistics of the 512,061 individuals living in the city of Stockholm in 2006 and included in the analyses. Numbers and percentages (within brackets).

No diabetes mellitus Diabetes mellitusa
N 505,448 (98.7) 6,613 (1.3)
Walkability Indexb 0.51 (2.62) 0.16 (2.44)
Men 240,325 (98.5) 3,686 (1.5)
Women 265,123 (98.9) 2,927 (1.1)
Income
Low (0–161,699 SEKc) 125,190 (98.5) 1,922 (1.5)
Mid-Low (161,700–260,199 SEK) 126,574 (98.6) 1,750 (1.4)
Mid-High (260,200–442,399 SEK) 126,604 (98.7) 1,670 (1.3)
High (442,400–693,106,000 SEK) 127,080 (99.0) 1,271 (1.0)
Education
Low (<10 years) 106,078 (97.9) 2,288 (2.1)
Middle (10–11 years) 79,520 (98.2) 1,499 (1.9)
High (>11 years) 319,850 (99.1) 2,826 (0.9)
Age (years) 44 (16.9)b 55 (14.9)b
NDId −0.07 (1.7)b 0.59 (2.11)b
a

Individuals that developed DM over the 2007–2010 follow-up period.

b

Mean (standard deviation)

c

One Swedish krona (SEK) equals about 0.15 USD

d

NDI=Neighborhood Deprivation Index