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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2015 Jul 9.
Published in final edited form as: Am J Health Behav. 2015 May;39(3):441–450. doi: 10.5993/AJHB.39.3.16

Table 1. Characteristics of 85 Survey Participants.

Overall (N = 85) Survey language p-valuea

English (N = 16; 19%) Creole (N = 69; 81%)
Age (years), Median (range) 52.0 (23.0, 80.0) 37.5 (23.0, 66.0) 55.0 (32.0, 80.0) <.001
Age (years), N (%) <.001
 <50 35 (41.2) 13 (81.3) 22 (31.9)
 ≥ 50 48 (56.5) 3 (18.8) 45 (65.2)
Sex, N (%) .546
 Male 22 (25.9) 3 (18.8) 19 (27.5)
 Female 63 (74.1) 13 (81.3) 50 (72.5)
Where born, N (%) .006
 US 3 (3.5) 3 (18.8) 0 (0.0)
 Haiti 80 (94.1) 13 (81.3) 67 (97.1)
 Other 1 (1.2) 0 (0.0) 1 (1.4)
Years living in US, N (%) .156
 ≤ 10 29 (34.1) 3 (18.8) 26 (37.7)
 >10 54 (63.5) 13 (81.3) 41 (59.4)
Marital status, N (%) .213
 Married/living with partner 44 (51.8) 8 (50.0) 36 (52.2)
 Single 22 (25.9) 7 (43.8) 15 (21.7)
 Divorced/separated/widowed 17 (20.0) 1 (6.3) 16 (23.2)
Salary, N (%) .049
 <$10,000 17 (20.0) 2 (12.5) 15 (21.7)
 $10,000-$29,999 32 (37.6) 5 (31.3) 27 (39.1)
 ≥ $30,000 19 (22.4) 8 (50.0) 11 (15.9)
Education, N (%) <.001
 Less than high school/GED 49 (57.6) 1 (6.3) 48 (69.6)
 2-year college/trade school 20 (23.5) 8 (50.0) 12 (17.4)
 4-year college or more 13 (15.3) 6 (37.5) 7 (10.1)

Note.

a

= p-value from Fisher's exact test when categorical and Wilcoxon test when continuous; missing observations excluded from calculation of p-value