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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2019 Nov 1.
Published in final edited form as: Thorax. 2018 Jun 13;73(11):1041–1048. doi: 10.1136/thoraxjnl-2017-211383

Table 1:

Demographic characteristics in a sample of 1,208 Latino and African American children with asthma, from the GALA II (N=836) and SAGE II (N=372) parent studies, recruited between 2006–2011.

Characteristic GALA II
n (%)
SAGE II
n (%)
Age (mean (sd)) 13.1 (3.4) 13.1 (3.4)
Male 442 (52.9) 201 (54.0)
Race/ethnicity
 Mexican 157 (18.8)
 Other Latino 15 (1.8)
 Puerto Rican 664 (79.4)
 African American 372 (100)
Maternal education
 5th grade or less 25 (3.0) 0 (0)
 Grades 6th–11th 183 (22.0) 18 (4.9)
 High school grad. or equivalent 223 (26.8) 103 (28.1)
 At least some college 401 (48.2) 245 (66.9)
Health insurance 806 (97.2) 369 (99.2)
Any current smokers reported in household* 159 (23.4) 99 (26.6)
Recruitment region
 Chicago 74 (8.9)
 Houston 34 (4.1)
 New York 81 (9.7)
 Puerto Rico 598 (71.5)
 SF Bay Area 49 (8.9) 372 (100)
Asthma control
 Controlled 132 (19.4) 123 (33.1)
 Not well controlled 265 (39.1) 106 (28.5)
 Very poorly controlled 281 (41.4) 143 (38.4)
Asthma exacerbations in the past 12 months
 Hospitalizations 92 (11.1) 8 (2.2)
 ER visits 478 (58.3) 112 (31.2)
 Oral steroid prescription 370 (44.7) 62 (17.0)
*

Self-reported number of current smokers in the household is limited to 679 of the GALA II subjects.

Asthma control was available for 678 of the GALA II subjects due to missingness in the information required for the variable definition. Information on asthma exacerbations was available in 1182, 1179 and 1192 subjects respectively for hospitalizations, ER visits and oral steroid prescription.

Percentages for variables with missingness are based on the totals with complete data.