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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2023 Aug 1.
Published in final edited form as: J Sch Psychol. 2022 Jul 19;93:98–118. doi: 10.1016/j.jsp.2022.07.001

Table 1.

Demographic Characteristics of Study Participants by Cohort

Adolescents Parents School Professionals Hospital Professionals

Gender
 Girl, woman, or female 14 (73.7) 17 (89.5) 15 (78.9) 7 (100)
 Boy, man, or male 2 (11.8) 2 (11.8) 4 (21.1) 0
 Something other than boy, man, girl, or woman 2 (11.8)
 Do not know if transgender 1 (5.3)
Race
 American Indian/Alaska Native†† 0 1 (5.3) 0 0
 Asian American†† 4 (21.0) 1 (5.3) 0 1 (14.3)
 Black or African American 2 (10.5) 2 (10.5) 2 (10.5) 1 (14.3)
 White 11 (57.9) 14 (73.7) 15 (79.0) 5 (71.4)
 Other††† 2 (10.5) 1 (5.3) 1 (5.3) 0
Ethnicity
 Latinx/Hispanic 4 (21.0) 2 (10.5) 1 (5.3) 1 (14.3)
 Non-Latinx/Hispanic 13 (79.0) 17 (89.5) 17 (89.5) 6 (85.7)

Note.

Response options for gender varied according to participant cohort

††

All adolescents and parents identifying as American Indian/Alaska Native or Asian American also identified as White

†††

One adolescent selecting “other” self-described their race as “Latino” and the other adolescent did not describe their race; the parent identifying as “other” self-described their race as Brazilian; the school professional identifying as “other” did not have an option to self-describe their race. Numbers represent frequency with percent shown in parentheses. Total percent may be less than 100 in cases where participants chose not to answer.