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. 2022 Jan 24;10(3):e390–e397. doi: 10.1016/S2214-109X(21)00550-7

Table 2.

Individuals covered and not covered by the Family Health Strategy in the 100 Million Brazilians cohort, Brazil, 2004–13.

Not covered (n=1 965 986) Coveredn=5 342 982)
Sex
Men 953 721 (48·5%) 2 896 904 (54·2%)
Woman 1 012 265 (51·5%) 2 446 078 (45·8%)
Age, years 20·5 (18·8) 20·8 (19.3)
Education
Never attended 606 170 (30·8%) 1 934 949 (36·2%)
Primary school or less (<5 years of education) 606 246 (30·8%) 1 807 448 (33·8%)
Junior high school (≥5 years but ≤9 years of education) 509 060 (25·9%) 1 139 673 (21·3%)
High school (≥10 years of education) 244 510 (12·4%) 460 912 (8·6%)
Ethnicity or race
White 1 115 204 (56·7%) 1 650 996 (30·9%)
Black 116 378 (5·9%) 338 040 (6·3%)
Brown 734 404 (37·4%) 3 353 946 (62·8%)
Number of individuals per household
≤2 334 487 (17·0%) 1 010 601 (18·9%)
>2 to ≤4 939 381 (47·8%) 2 527 908 (47·3%)
≥5 692 118 (35·2%) 1 804 473 (33·8%)
Household material
Brick or cement 1 672 352 (85·1%) 3 855 868 (72·2%)
Other (wood or other vegetal materials) 293 634 (14·9%) 1 487 114 (27·8%)
Family per capita income
Below the median (0·5 $BR/month) 1 357 396 (69·0%) 2 573 797 (48·2%)
Above the median (0·5 $BR/month) 608 590 (31·0%) 2 769 185 (51·8%)
Time receiving Bolsa Família, months 54·48 (41·39) 70·17 (44·38)
Year of entry of individual in cohort
2004 155 449 (7·9%) 322 483 (6·0%)
2005 149 319 (7·6%) 381 286 (7·1%)
2006 519 499 (26·4%) 2 103 466 (39·4%)
2007 215 877 (11·0%) 712 847 (13·3%)
2008 121 191 (6·2%) 316 153 (5·9%)
2009 135 482 (6·9%) 330 887 (6·2%)
2010 159 090 (8·1%) 247 657 (4·6%)
2011 159 167 (8·1%) 270 015 (5·1%)
2012 203 268 (10·3%) 389 234 (7·3%)
2013 147 644 (7·5%) 268 954 (5·0%)

Data are n (%) or mean (SD).