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Measuring Physical Activity: Tools and Indicators

Measuring Physical Activity: Tools and Indicators. Bill Kohl University of Texas Health Science Center – Houston School of Public Health University of Texas at Austin Department of Kinesiology and Health Education 19 th International Physical Activity and Public Health Training Course

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Measuring Physical Activity: Tools and Indicators

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  1. Measuring Physical Activity: Tools and Indicators Bill Kohl University of Texas Health Science Center – Houston School of Public Health University of Texas at Austin Department of Kinesiology and Health Education 19th International Physical Activity and Public Health Training Course Palm Beach Aruba, June 2012

  2. Objectives • Conceptual framework • Key issues in physical activity assessment • Overview of physical activity surveillance

  3. Behavior Characteristic Outcome Physiological Attributes Physiological, Psychosocial and Environmental Correlates Leisure Occupation Basal (or Resting) Metabolic Rate Human Movement Thermogenesis Household Domestic Self-Care Transport Activity-Related Energy Expenditure Energy Expenditure Physical Activity Cardiorespiratory Muscular Fitness Flexibility Balance Body Composition Physical Fitness Health Enhancing Sedentary Non Discretionary Discretionary Health Compromising Sleep Variable Association with Health Outcomes Gabriel et al 2011

  4. Leisure Occupation Specific Activity Type e.g., soccer, lifting heavy boxes or children, walking Frequency Exercise Intensity Household Domestic Self-Care Transport Intensity Category e.g., light, moderate, vigorous Duration Pattern Physical Activity Recall Cue Characteristic Gabriel et al 2011

  5. Methodological Concepts • Validation standard • A predetermined criterion against which the accuracy of the test instrument is measured. The standard is presumably less variable than the test method. • Variety of validation standards in physical activity

  6. Methodological Concepts • Validation standards in physical activity assessment • Energy expenditure • Physical fitness • Physical activity • Body composition • Variety of methods of each standard

  7. Methodological Concepts • Practicality • Non-reactivity

  8. Physical Activity Assessment • Calorimetry • Doubly labeled water • Direct observation • Job classification • Monitoring • Self report • Dietary questionnaires

  9. Physical Activity Assessment • Doubly-labeled water • Based on ingestion of water with radioisotopic labeled hydrogen and oxygen atoms • Energy expenditure measured by measuring unmetabolized portion of water over period of time • Highly accurate • Impractical for large studies

  10. Physical Activity Assessment • Direct Observation • Individual observer monitoring a consenting individual for a set period of time • Videos and still photos are possible alternatives • Summary index of energy expenditure • Impractical for large population studies • Likely highly reactive

  11. Physical Activity Assessment • Job Classification • Index and ranking of individuals based on energy demands of usual occupation/job title • May be less useful in populations where variance in job energy demands is minimal • Seasonality, selection, misclassification • No indicator of leisure time activity

  12. Physical Activity Assessment • Monitoring • Heart rate monitors, motion sensors, pedometers, accelerometers • Assume mathematical relation between measurements and physical activity • Many can can measure quantity and intensity of physical activity • Recent advances make devices more practical

  13. Physical Activity Assessment • Self-report • Diaries, interviews and self-administered surveys • Varying lengths of recall, all assumed to be indicators of “usual” physical activity • Varying quality of summary indices • May not be transferrable among populations • Most often used in population-based research • Highly variable and questionnable accuracy

  14. Physical Activity Assessment • Dietary measures • Caloric value of food consumed used as a measure of corresponding energy utilized • Assumes energy balance • Body weight is confounding factor • Expensive and difficult to weigh all food prior to intake for any period of time • Intake in free-living populations is highly variable • Diet surveys are not practical

  15. Direct Calorimetry Doubly-Labeled Water Decreasing difficulty Indirect Calorimetry Direct Observation Increasing precision Monitoring Self-Report Physical activity assessment cascade

  16. Physical Activity Assessment: Future Directions • Emphasis must be on measuring more than just total “dose”: understanding intensity, frequency, and patterns is critical • Methods to assess historical physical activity (recall) are important • Accelerometers are likely the most productive future trend in physical activity assessment. More work on electronics is needed

  17. Physical Activity Assessment: Future Directions • Intra-individual variation in physical activity assessment: How many days are enough? • Methods for assessing non-aerobic activities • How can existing physical activity assessment instruments be adapted/adopted into different populations and subgroups?

  18. The Uses of Public Health Chronic Disease and Behavioral Surveillance Systems • Quantify magnitude of health problem • Describe natural history of disease • Detect “outbreaks” • Document Person, Place and Time • Test hypotheses • Evaluate intervention measures (control/prevention) • Detection of changes in health practices • Policy and planning Adapted from Thacker, 1994

  19. Steps in Planning a Public Health Surveillance System • Establish objectives • Develop case definitions • Determine data source(s) and mechanism of collection • Develop instruments • Field-test methods – refine as necessary • Develop and test analytic approaches • Develop and test dissemination mechanisms • Evaluate analysis and interpretation Adapted from Teutsch, 1994

  20. Caution! Surveillance Versus Assessment

  21. Public Health Physical Activity Surveillance – The Ideal? Individuals Environmental Determinants Policy Non-public health data sources

  22. Public Health Physical Activity Surveillance – Individual-level data Individuals • Frequency • Intensity • Duration • Mode • Domains • “Meeting” recommendations • Health Objectives eg. BRFSS; YRBS; HANES; NHIS; NHTS, etc.

  23. International PA surveillance

  24. 70% Finland 60 Australia 50 15+, 2+/wk 18+, 150m/wk, 5 sessions Canada 40 Scotland 30 18+, 3/wk 18+, 3+ kkd Australia 20 18+, 1625+ kwk USA 10 18+, vigorous 0 80 82 84 86 88 90 92 94 96 98 International trends in “Regular Physical Activity”: Adults With thanks to Cora Craig, CFLRI, Ottawa

  25. IPAQINTERNATIONAL PHYSICAL ACTIVITY QUESTIONNAIREfirst steps towards global measurement of physical activity

  26. IPAQ group : measurement and development tasks 1997-2004 Phase I dreaming up a global measure 1997-8 Phase II testing, formative work on questions internationally Phase III formal reliability and validity testing in 11 countries 2000 Phase IV International prevalence study – testing it in the field 2003-4

  27. IPAQ summary • Reasonable measurement properties • First internationally comparable studies used IPAQ – initially in Europe only • Short and long versions • IPS - prevalence differences noted • Differences in sitting time • Methodological issues with international work • An example of good PAPH collaboration of national physical activity scientists

  28. Proximo? • IPAQ developed 1998-2000 • IPAQ reliability and validity study • IPAQ prevalence study • But IPAQ was not enough …..

  29. Development of GPAQ • Half way between IPAQ short form and IPAQ long form • STEPwise approach to NCD risk Factor surveillance (“STEPS”) especially for developing countries

  30. IPAQ SHORT IPAQ LONG 6 items on PA across the 4 Domains; sitting = 1 Total n=7 Job related = 7; Transport = 6; Home = 6; Recreation = 6; Sitting = 2 Total n=27 GPAQ GPAQ Strengths + domains + quantifies exposure + cross cultural application GPAQ Weaknesses + new measure + needs testing

  31. Developments • Portugal meeting 2005 and Rome meeting 2007: consensus re findings of GPAQ- discussion of GPAQ in the field • Feedback from STEPS countries; Suggestions for change • Remaining issues • How well GPAQ or IPAQ reflects PA patterns in sub populations in developing countries • Recall of time and understanding of 10 minute minimum • More research warranted in developing countries / continue to build capacity

  32. Current Global PA surveillance • WHO has canvassed across countries (May 2005) and made slight changes to GPAQ - new version is called GPAQ2 • So global surveillance has 2 currently used PA instruments • “IPAQ” adapted countries will use IPAQ, and “GPAQ experienced” countries continue to use GPAQ / GPAQ2 • Other countries with existing PA surveillance will likely rely on existing systems

  33. Public Health Physical Activity Surveillance – Environmental Data Urban design Density Access to destinations Connectivity Aesthetics Land use Green space Transportation Infrastructure, Public transit Safety Perceptions Environmental Determinants

  34. Prevalence environmental determinants and supports for physical activity, US 1990-1998 Percent Year

  35. Public Health Physical Activity Surveillance – Policy-level Data • Written codes, written standards, unwritten norms • Legislation (enacted, pending, defeated – level?) • Urban design • Land use • Transportation • Safety • Organizational policy • Schools • Worksites • Neighborhood Policy

  36. Physical Activity Policy Research Framework Research Type Outcomes of Policy Develop and Implement Policy Determinants of Policy Identify Policies Transportation Local Parks/Public Spaces Regional State Worksite National School Level Sector

  37. Prevalence of policy supports for physical activity, US 1990-1998 Percent Year

  38. Initial legislative topic areas • Urban design • Land use • Transportation • Community physical activity promotion • Physical education

  39. Upcoming Challenges • Emerging research • Level? Local versus state (and linkages) • Indices and weighting • Appropriations • Measuring change • Legislative policies, regulations, organizational policies, social norms? • Appropriate outcome data • How will data be most useful (and to whom)?

  40. Public Health Physical Activity Surveillance – The Ideal? Media attention “Critical mass” Industry and marketing data individual and aggregate Trade associations Others? Non-public health data sources

  41. Public Health Physical Activity Surveillance – The Ideal? Other Issues: Definitions, definitions, definitions Data Level of monitoring? Type of system? How will data be used? Periodicity Aggregation to conduct analyses with other types of surveillance data Local, State and Regional needs

  42. Public Health Physical Activity Surveillance – The Ideal? • Surveillance systems must: • Address a measurable construct. • Be able to quantify changes as they occur. • Apply to the majority of the population of interest. • Must address public health issues that are changeable. • Be responsive to new data and methodolgic advances.

  43. Public Health Physical Activity Surveillance – The Ideal? Individuals Environmental Determinants Policy Non-public health data sources

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