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Combined with wireless-only homes, this means that to call 43 percent of American households, the only practical way to do it is to dial their cell phones. The study also found that: The households likeliest to rely only on wireless phones consist of adults who are poor, renters, Hispanics or who live with unrelated housemates. Men were slightly more likely than women to live in homes with only cell phones. Only 13 percent of households have landlines and no cell phones
-- down from 24 percent in early 2007. Though people age 18-29 are the heaviest cell phone users, they comprise only 40 percent of all wireless-only adults. That's because young adults make up only about one-fifth of the total adult population. Only 16 percent of Northeasterners live in cell phone-only homes, the lowest of any region. The highest frequency of wireless-only households is in the South, where 29 percent live that way. About 2 percent of households have no phone service at all, a figure that has changed little in recent years. The data for the study was compiled in the National Health Interview Survey, conducted by CDC's National Center for Health Statistics. It is based on interviews with members of 17,619 households conducted from January through June this year.
[Associated
Press;
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