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. 2019 Apr 2;8(4):e11794. doi: 10.2196/11794

Table 3.

Baseline demographic characteristics of the study cohort (N=295).

Characteristics Statistics
Gender, n (%)
  Male 117 (39.7)
  Female 175 (59.3)
  Other 3 (1.0)
Primary language: Spanish, n (%) 116 (39.3)
Race, n (%)
  American Indians and Alaska Natives 74 (25.1)
  Hispanic 153 (51.9)
  Non-Hispanic white 43 (14.2)
  Non-Hispanic African American 14 (4.8)
  Other 11 (3.7)
Marital status, n (%)a
  Married 95 (32.3)
  Marriage-like relationship 37 (12.6)
  Separated or divorced 83 (28.2)
  Widowed 20 (6.8)
  Never married 59 (20.1)
Education, n (%)a
  8th grade or less 79 (26.9)
  Some high school 32 (10.9)
  High school grade or General Equivalent Development Test 61 (20.8)
  Some college 79 (26.9)
  4-year college degree 25 (8.5)
  More than 4-year college degree 18 (6.1)
Employment, n (%)
  Employed for wages 106 (35.9)
  Self-employed 20 (6.8)
  Out of work for 1 year or more 19 (6.4)
  Out of work for less than 1 year 12 (4.1)
  Homemaker 32 (10.9)
  Student 4 (1.4)
  Retired 50 (17.0)
  Unable to work 52 (17.6)
Household income, n (%)a
  Nothing 27 (10.2)
  Less than US $10,000 75 (28.3)
  US $10,000 to US $14,999 50 (18.9)
  US $15,000 to US $19,999 26 (9.8)
  US $20,000 to US $24,999 35 (13.2)
  US $25,000 to US $34,999 22 (8.3)
  US $35,000 to US $49,999 17 (6.4)
  US $50,000 to US $74,999 10 (3.8)
  More than US $75,000 3 (1.1)
Household income, mean (SD) US $17,170 (17,058)

aNumbers do not sum to 295 due to missing values. The number of missing values are as follows: marital status=1, education=1, household income=30.