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. 2017 Jan 7;14:3. doi: 10.1186/s12966-016-0459-6

Table 2.

Sociodemographic characteristics of temporal eating patterns, overall and by latent class membership

Men (n = 2402) Women (n = 2840)
Overall Conventional Later Lunch Grazing P value1 Overall Conventional Later Lunch Grazing P value1
Age (y, mean [SD]) 47 (17) 51 (17)a 48 (16)b 41 (16)c <0.01 49 (18) 51 (20)a 50 (16)a 46 (17)b <0.001
Education level (%) <0.001 <0.001
 Low 21 26 17 17 29 35 26 25
 Medium 54 54 54 53 42 41 47 39
 High 26 21 30 30 28 24 27 36
Weekly income (quintiles, [%])2 0.14 0.24
 First: <$398 16 18 13 18 22 25 19 21
 Second: $399–638 17 17 17 16 19 19 19 18
 Third: $639–958 19 21 19 17 19 20 19 19
 Fourth: $959–1,438 23 23 21 23 19 18 18 22
 Fifth: ≥ $1439 25 21 30 26 21 18 25 20
Geographic region (%) <0.01 <0.01
 Major cities of Australia 73 69 72 81 74 70 74 80
 Inner regional cities 18 20 21 12 18 20 19 13
 Other areas (rural or remote) 9 11 8 7 9 10 7 7
Country of birth (%) 0.23 <0.001
 Australia 69 70 71 63 69 71 74 59
 Main English speaking countries 12 12 11 14 12 12 12 12
 All other countries 19 18 18 23 19 17 15 29
Hours worked in past week (%) 0.03 0.02
 Not in workforce 30 31 26 33 44 49 42 39
  < 35 h 10 8 11 14 27 24 30 28
  ≥ 35 h 60 61 63 53 29 28 28 33
Social marital status (%) <0.001 0.01
 Married3 63 67 67 48 59 58 64 56
 Not married 37 33 33 52 41 42 36 44
Household composition (%) <0.001 0.01
 Person living alone 13 14 11 15 16 19 14 15
 Couple only 32 36 32 23 31 31 34 26
 Couple with children 38 35 42 38 34 30 26 27
 Other household 17 15 15 24 19 20 17 22

1Different superscript letters indicate significant differences between classes, assessed using a F-test with Bonferroni correction for continuous variables. Differences between classes for categorical variables were assessed using an adjusted Pearson Chi2 test

2 n = 2258 men and n = 2586 women due to missing cases for income

3In a registered or de facto marriage