Skip to main content
. 2020 Jun 29;12(7):1929. doi: 10.3390/nu12071929

Figure 2.

Figure 2

Mediterranean Diet adherence mean scores and 95% confidence intervals of older adults in the US by demographic characteristic. Sex: male (n = 1509), female (n = 1559); Age: 60–64.9 (n = 930), 65–69.9 (n = 675), 70–74.9 (n = 551), 75–79.9 (n = 361), 80+ (n = 551); Race: Non-Hispanic White (n = 1463), Non-Hispanic Black (n = 740), Mexican American (n = 273), Other Hispanic (n = 301), Non-Hispanic Asian (n = 242), Other Race (n = 49); Education: <9th Grade (n = 412), 9-11th Grade (n = 447), High School/GED (n = 708), Some College/AA Degree (n = 830), College Graduate or Above (n = 667); Income to Poverty Ratio: <1 (n = 526), 1–2 (n = 838), >2 (n = 1458); Marital Status: Married (n = 1660), Widowed (n = 632), Divorced (n = 425), Separated (n = 82), Never Married (n = 187), Cohabitating (n = 79); Diabetes Status: Yes (n = 741), No (n = 2337). Analyses were survey-weighted ordinary least squares regression models using Tukey’s HSD for multiple pairwise comparisons. Models were not adjusted for covariates. p-values based on mean difference from the lowest mean value of each demographic category. * p < 0.05, ** p < 0.01, *** p < 0001.