“…For example, the impacts of class, gender, race, migration and sexual orientation in Canada have been investigated (43,44), as has those of gender, sexual orientation and race in the United States (45,46), and of class, gender and regional context in Spain (47). Common to these studies, however, is that they adopt a categorical approach focused on between-group differences in average risk, without assessing individual heterogeneity and thus potentially allowing for a complementary anti-categorical stance.…”