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. 2022 Jun 22;24(6):e35285. doi: 10.2196/35285

Table 3.

Demographic distribution across parent digital phenotypes (N=214).

Predictors of parent digital phenotypesa Fully engaged Partially engaged Independently engaged Socially engaged Unengaged
Phenotype sample size, N 26 32 18 35 103
Age (years), mean (SD)b 44.5 (7.1) 42.2 (5.6) 44.5 (7.1) 46.7 (6.6) 43.5 (6.0)
Sex (female), n (%) 26 (100) 32 (100) 17 (94.4) 31 (88.6) 92 (89.3)
Household income (≥CAD $80,000; US $63,771), n (%) 16 (61.5) 20 (62.5) 9 (50) 17 (48.6) 57 (55.3)
Parental education (more than a Bachelor’s degree), n (%) 9 (34.6) 20 (62.5) 9 (50) 14 (40) 41 (39.8)
Parental marital status (married, common law, or living with a partner), n (%)c 25 (96.2) 27 (84.4) 12 (66.7) 26 (74.3) 73 (70.9)
Race or ethnicity (White or European), n (%) 20 (76.9) 19 (59.3) 11 (61.1) 20 (57.1) 59 (57.3)
Recruitment through a clinical setting, n (%) 9 (34.6) 14 (43.8) 8 (44.4) 17 (48.6) 47 (45.6)

aPredictors’ reference groups are: male, household income <CAD $80,000 (US $63,771), parental educational attainment lower than a bachelor’s degree, single parents, people who did not self-identify as having a White or European descent, and recruitment through Facebook.

bThe age of both fully engaged and unengaged parents significantly differs from the age of socially engaged parents.

cThe marital status of fully engaged parents significantly differs from both independently engaged and unengaged parents’ marital status.