Table 2 Observed resilience profile distributions in weighted sample.

From: The relationships between resilience and child health behaviors in a national dataset

Resilience profilea

Ages 0–5 Years N (%)

Ages 6–17 Years N (%)

C + F + N

7,091,192 (31.5%)

N/Ab

C + F

1,294,056 (5.7%)

N/A

C + N

211,386 (0.9%)

N/A

F + N

71,187 (0.3%)

14,839,753 (31.2%)

C

300,563 (1.3%)

N/A

F

39,198 (0.2%)

1,519,621 (3.2%)

N

16,587 (0.1%)

1,167,752 (2.5%)

None (all low)

21,924 (0.1%)

811,315 (1.7%)

Not meeting profile criteriac

13,480,713 (59.5%)

29,291,293 (61.5%)

  1. aResilience profiles are labeled according to which domains have “high” resilience: C = high child resilience, F = high family resilience, and N = high neighborhood resilience. Thus, “C + F + N” denotes high resilience in all three domains. We categorized “high” resilience scores as 2.5–3.0 and “low” resilience scores as 0–1.5.
  2. bN/A not applicable. This is due to the NSCH survey methodology; specifically, the survey items used in our study to assess the child resilience domain were administered only to the 0–5 year age group but not the 6–17 year age group.
  3. cObservations in any domain with a score between 1.5 and 2.5 do not meet criteria for the listed resilience profiles.