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B18001. SEX BY AGE BY NUMBER OF DISABILITIES FOR THE CIVILIAN NONINSTITUTIONALIZED POPULATION 5 YEARS AND OVER - Universe: CIVILIAN NONINSTITUTIONALIZED POPULATION 5 YEARS AND OVER
Data Set: 2004 American Community Survey
Survey: American Community Survey

NOTE. Data are limited to the household population and exclude the population living in institutions, college dormitories, and other group quarters. For information on confidentiality protection, sampling error, nonsampling error, and definitions, see Survey Methodology.
 

United States

 

Estimate

Lower Bound

Upper Bound

Total:

264,965,834

264,900,653

265,031,015

Male:

128,954,988

128,889,331

129,020,645

5 to 15 years:

22,948,909

22,900,920

22,996,898

Without any disability

21,119,641

21,062,793

21,176,489

With one type of disability

1,491,424

1,451,659

1,531,189

With two or more types of disability

337,844

319,673

356,015

16 to 20 years:

9,557,383

9,499,070

9,615,696

Without any disability

8,814,074

8,755,253

8,872,895

With one type of disability

465,295

444,557

486,033

With two or more types of disability

278,014

261,217

294,811

21 to 64 years:

81,901,880

81,822,490

81,981,270

Without any disability

72,124,903

72,001,543

72,248,263

With one type of disability

4,189,882

4,126,668

4,253,096

With two or more types of disability

5,587,095

5,496,295

5,677,895

65 to 74 years:

8,283,586

8,261,347

8,305,825

Without any disability

5,901,580

5,861,561

5,941,599

With one type of disability

1,337,454

1,310,619

1,364,289

With two or more types of disability

1,044,552

1,017,439

1,071,665

75 years and over:

6,263,230

6,244,378

6,282,082

Without any disability

3,242,048

3,204,776

3,279,320

With one type of disability

1,320,986

1,290,946

1,351,026

With two or more types of disability

1,700,196

1,670,042

1,730,350

Female:

136,010,846

135,953,576

136,068,116

5 to 15 years:

21,940,127

21,893,271

21,986,983

Without any disability

20,945,248

20,889,822

21,000,674

With one type of disability

778,113

753,046

803,180

With two or more types of disability

216,766

205,728

227,804

16 to 20 years:

9,102,080

9,037,999

9,166,161

Without any disability

8,562,311

8,499,627

8,624,995

With one type of disability

331,549

314,595

348,503

With two or more types of disability

208,220

196,324

220,116

21 to 64 years:

85,310,154

85,252,523

85,367,785

Without any disability

74,874,738

74,753,212

74,996,264

With one type of disability

4,252,105

4,184,749

4,319,461

With two or more types of disability

6,183,311

6,106,893

6,259,729

65 to 74 years:

9,880,164

9,856,198

9,904,130

Without any disability

6,987,243

6,941,524

7,032,962

With one type of disability

1,542,165

1,506,385

1,577,945

With two or more types of disability

1,350,756

1,321,068

1,380,444

75 years and over:

9,778,321

9,757,638

9,799,004

Without any disability

4,535,468

4,491,791

4,579,145

With one type of disability

1,920,779

1,888,683

1,952,875

With two or more types of disability

3,322,074

3,280,297

3,363,851

Source: U.S. Census Bureau, 2004 American Community Survey

Data are based on a sample and are subject to sampling variability. The degree of uncertainty for an estimate arising from sampling variability is represented through the use of a confidence interval. The interval shown here is a 90 percent confidence interval. The stated range can be interpreted roughly as providing a 90 percent probability that the interval defined by the lower and upper bounds contains the true value. In addition to sampling variability, the ACS estimates are subject to nonsampling error (for a discussion of nonsampling variability, see Accuracy of the Data). The effect of nonsampling error is not represented in these tables.

The Census Bureau introduced a new skip pattern for the disability questions in the 2003 ACS questionnaire. This change mainly affected two individual items -- go-outside-home disability and employment disability -- and the recode for disability status, which includes the two items. Accordingly, comparisons of data from 2003 or later with data from prior years are not recommended for the relevant questions. For more information, see the ACS Subject Definitions for Disability.

Explanation of Symbols:
1. An '*' entry in the lower and upper bound columns indicates that too few sample observations were available to compute a standard error and thus the lower and upper bounds. A statistical test is not appropriate.
2. An '**' entry in the lower and upper bound columns indicates that no sample observations were available to compute a standard error and thus the lower and upper bounds. A statistical test is not appropriate.
3. An '-' entry in the estimate column indicates that no sample observations were available to compute an estimate.
4. An '-' following a median estimate means the median falls in the lowest interval of an open-ended distribution.
5. An '+' following a median estimate means the median falls in the upper interval of an open-ended distribution.
6. An '***' entry in the lower and upper bound columns indicates that the median falls in the lowest interval or upper interval of an open-ended distribution. A statistical test is not appropriate.
7. An '*****' entry in the lower and upper bound columns indicates that the estimate is controlled. A statistical test for sampling variability is not appropriate.




Standard Error/Variance documentation for this dataset:
2004 Accuracy of the Data


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