Not exact matches
There were no significant
differences between the 12 test groups in the
proportions of main vs. joint household grocery purchasing responsibility (F11, 789 = 1.5, p > 0.05), gender (F11, 789 = 0.6, p > 0.05),
age group (F11, 789 = 0.5, p > 0.05), education level (F11, 789 = 1.0, p > 0.05) or household income (F11, 789 = 0.9, p > 0.05), indicating that randomization to test groups was successful.
None
of these
differences, however, were statistically significant, and the
proportions of children with 4-fold or higher rises in antibody levels was similarly high in all
age groups and at all post-immunization time points (data not shown), supporting the conclusion that there was no dose effect.
Similar numbers
of child protection issues were identified in the two groups between 6 and 12 months
of age (17 % home visiting groups and 15 % control group), but a non-significant increase in the likelihood
of placement on the child protection register or care proceedings in the intervention group (RR 2.02, 95 % CI 0.46 to 2.54) and a non-significant
difference in the
proportion of children being removed from the home (6 % v 0 %) were observed.
While the
proportion of Indigenous women
aged 40 years and over reporting regular mammograms was lower in 2004 - 05 (32 %) than in 2001 (39 %), this
difference was not statistically significant (table 27).
Furthermore, a large
proportion of comparison participants qualified for a lifetime psychiatric diagnosis (combining subthreshold and full diagnoses)(Table 4), sometimes exceeding population rates.40 It seems more compelling that
differences at the mean
age of 41 years between probands and comparison participants reflect differential development, especially because findings are highly consistent with other, briefer follow - up studies.
No
differences between the samples were found in terms
of maternal
age, the
proportion of mothers having a Dutch ethnicity, the
proportion of boys and girls, or the children's birth weight.
Possible
age and sex
differences were investigated for three components
of involvement:
proportion of time spent with fathers and mothers, type
of activities engaged in, and degree
of satisfaction with those activities.