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. 2021 Aug 12;21:802. doi: 10.1186/s12913-021-06783-9

Table 1.

Primary Care Participant Characteristics

Total
(N = 65)
HIGH
(n = 23)
LOW
(n = 29)
Extended Primary Care Team
(n = 13)
Follow-up Interview
(n = 16)
Characteristic N (%) n (%) n (%) n (%) n (%)
Role
 Provider 12 (18) 6 (50) 6 (50) 0 (0) 3 (25)
 Nurse 14 (22) 5 (36) 9 (64) 0 (0) 7 (50)
 Clinical Associate 14 (22) 6 (43) 8 (57) 0 (0) 4 (29)
 Clerical Associate 12 (18) 6 (50) 6 (50) 0 (0) 2 (17)
 Other (Pharmacists, Psychologists, Dietician, Social Worker) 13 (20) 0 (0) 0 (0) 13 (100) 0 (0)
Race a
 White, Caucasian 46 (69) 13 (57) 22 (76) 11 (92) 12 (75)
 Black, African American 10 (15) 6 (26) 3 (10) 1 (8) 1 (6)
 Other b 11 (17) 4 (17) 4 (14) 3 (23) 3 (19)
Ethnicity
 Hispanic 8 (13) 3 (13) 1 (3) 4 (33) 0 (0)
 Not Hispanic 44 (75) 13 (57) 24 (83) 7 (58) 10 (63)
 Decline to Respond 7 (12) 7 (30) 4 (14) 1 (8) 6 (38)
Sex
 Female 48 (75) 19 (83) 21 (72) 8 (67) 14 (88)
Age
 25–35 14 (24) 3 (14) 2 (10) 7 (64) 0 (0)
 36–45 10 (17) 3 (14) 6 (29) 3 (27) 3 (23)
 46–55 14 (24) 8 (38) 8 (38) 1 (9) 6 (46)
 56–60 15 (26) 4 (19) 2 (10) 0 (0) 2 (15)
 61 + 5 (9) 2 (10) 3 (14) 0 (0) 2 (15)

a Note: participants selected multiple racial categories, so the percentages add up to more than 100%

b Note: Other category includes Asian (Chinese, Filipino, Japanese, Korean etc.), Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander, American Indian or Alaskan Native, Unknown and Other