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Table 5 Associations between elements of at-home measurement of cardiometabolic risk markers and the sociodemographic variables age, sex (female) and educational attainment (high education) (n = 391)

From: Participant recruitment, baseline characteristics and at-home-measurements of cardiometabolic risk markers: insights from the Supreme Nudge parallel cluster-randomised controlled supermarket trial

 

Agea, years

Sex

Educational attainment

β

(95% CI)

ORfemales

(95% CI)

ORhigh education

(95% CI)

Participants requesting a home-visit (n = 68)

0.96

(− 1.93; 3.84)

0.97

(0.56; 1.78)

1.11

(0.64; 1.92)

Failed first attempt of blood measurement (n = 86)

3.89

(1.28; 6.49)

1.13

(0.67; 1.99)

0.64

(0.38; 1.06)

Non-completers HbA1c measurement (n = 22)

− 8.92

(− 13.62; − 4.28)

1.15

(0.43; 3.60)

1.46

(0.59; 3.58)

Non-completers LDL-cholesterol measurement (n = 49)

− 3.19

(− 6.53; 0.09)

0.79

(0.41; 1.55)

0.91

(0.48; 1.71)

Non-completers waist circumference measurement (n = 8)

− 0.61

(− 8.38; 7.04)

0.18

(0.03; 0.95)

1.45

(0.33; 6.37)

  1. Statistical significant outcomes (p < 0.05) are displayed in bold text. Associations are based on linear multilevel models (age) and logistic multilevel models (sex and education), including a random intercept on the supermarket level. Males are used as reference category in the analyses of sex, and the combination of low and medium educational attainment was used as reference category for the analyses of educational attainment. OR odds ratio, CI confidence interval; an = 2 missing values