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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2021 Sep 1.
Published in final edited form as: Child Abuse Negl. 2020 Jul 16;107:104627. doi: 10.1016/j.chiabu.2020.104627

Table 2:

Demographic characteristics by Adverse Childhood Experience (ACE) exposure in the 2015 American Men’s Internet Survey

N ACE Exposure ≥ 1 (N= 2,063) % (n) No ACE Exposure (N= 527) % (n) P1
Age at Survey 0.54
 18–24 889 79.6 (576) 20.4 (148)
 25–29 529 77.1 (313) 22.9 (93)
 30–39 467 80.5 (281) 19.5 (68)
 ≥40 1468 80.4 (893) 19.6 (218)
Race/ethnicity <.0001
 Black 221 87.0 (140) 13.0 (21)
 Hispanic/Latino 436 87.9 (270) 12.1 (37)
 White 2408 76.9 (1467) 23.1 (440)
 Other/Multiple 229 86.9 (152) 13.1 (23)
Education <.0001
 ≤High School Diploma or Equivalent 377 88.9 (263) 11.1 (33)
 Some College of Technical Degree 1159 82.8 (733) 17.2 (152)
 College Degree or Postgraduate 1778 75.5 (1046) 24.5 (340)
 Education
Income 0.04
 $0–19,999 440 83.8 (295) 16.2 (57)
 $20,000–39,999 569 82.3 (372) 17.7 (80)
 $40,000–74,999 779 79.8 (506) 20.2 (128)
 ≥$75,000 995 77.2 (606) 22.8 (179)
NCHS Rural/Urban Classification 0.12
 Urban 1376 79.5 (843) 20.5 (217)
 Suburban 658 77.5 (393) 22.5 (114)
 Small/medium metropo\tan 990 82.3 (626) 17.7 (135)
 Rural 326 76.9 (200) 23.1 (60)
1

Chi-square test for difference in demographic characteristics between ACE exposure groups