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. 2021 Jun 28;78(11):801–808. doi: 10.1136/oemed-2020-107276

Table 1.

Demographic characteristics of the sample (n=4378)*

Characteristic N (weighted %)
Age (years) Mean age: 41 (SD 12)
 ≤30 985 (24.2)
 31–40 1138 (30.7)
 41–50 979 (23.5)
 51–60 861 (20.8)
 ≥61 171 (4.1)
Sex
 Female 3482 (74.8)
 Male 833 (24.6)
 Other 6 (0.2)
 Prefer not to say 18 (0.5)
Relationship status
 Married/civil partnership 1827 (42.2)
 Cohabiting/in a relationship 1129 (23.2)
 Divorced/separated/widowed 251 (6.3)
 Single 1114 (28.3)
Ethnicity
 White 3215 (53.2)
 Black/African/Caribbean/black British 373 (20.0)
 Asian/Asian British 477 (17.4)
 Mixed/multiple racial and ethnic groups 173 (3.9)
 Other racial and ethnic minority groups† 90 (4.5)
Country of birth
 UK 2974 (61.1)
 EU (not UK) 525 (9.8)
 Other 812 (29.2)
Length of time living in the UK (for those born outside the UK) (years)
 <1–2 106 (7.8)
 3–5 163 (10.9)
 6–10 210 (14.5)
 11–20 404 (32.5)
 21–29 223 (17.1)
 ≥30 220 (16.5)
 Prefer not to say 7 (0.7)
Main role‡
 Doctor 557 (12.8)
 Nurse 1107 (26.7)
 Other clinical 1306 (28.3)
 Non-clinical 1356 (32.3)

*Frequencies are unweighted, and proportions are weighted. Numbers may not add up due to missing data.

†‘Other racial and ethnic minority groups’ includes the options ‘Arab’ and ‘Any other ethnic background’.

‡In the ‘main role’ variable, ‘other clinical’ includes all other clinical roles, for example, physiotherapist, psychologist, dietician, radiographer, etc. ‘Non-clinical’ includes all other roles, for example, administrative, domestic services, IT support, finance, etc.