Age and Sex Patterns

Older age was inversely associated with low resilience (OR 0.9, 95% CI 0.9–1.0), meaning older students had lower odds of low resilience. Patients aged 19-39 and 40-59 had substantially higher mobile web response rates than telephone respo…

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Older age was inversely associated with low resilience (OR 0.9, 95% CI 0.9–1.0), meaning older students had lower odds of low resilience. Patients aged 19-39 and 40-59 had substantially higher mobile web response rates than telephone response rates. Mobile web cooperation exceeded telephone cooperation in every gender-age subgroup. Males had higher wound prevalence than females across every wound category. Older age was associated with higher odds of caregiving-related health deterioration only for women. Males had higher mortality and YLL measures than females, while females had a higher median age at death. Among men, being 75 or older was not statistically associated with health deterioration. Men had higher rates of aortic regurgitation and mitral regurgitation, while women had higher rates of mitral stenosis and tricuspid regurgitation. Female syphilis incidence peaked in the teens and 20s, and adolescent females had higher rates than adolescent males. Women had more atrial fibrillation or flutter than men in the cohort. Male syphilis incidence was consistently high from the 20s through the 50s. Males exhibited higher glaucoma prevalence than females through age 80, after whi…