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Reproducibility of Accelerometer-Assessed Physical Activity and Sedentary Time
- Publication Year :
- 2017
-
Abstract
- Introduction Accelerometers are used increasingly in large epidemiologic studies, but, given logistic and cost constraints, most studies are restricted to a single, 7-day accelerometer monitoring period. It is unknown how well a 7-day accelerometer monitoring period estimates longer-term patterns of behavior, which is critical for interpreting, and potentially improving, disease risk estimates in etiologic studies. Methods A subset of participants from the Women’s Health Study (N=209; mean age, 70.6 [SD=5.7] years) completed at least two 7-day accelerometer administrations (ActiGraph GT3X+) within a period of 2–3 years. Monitor output was translated into total counts, steps, and time spent in sedentary, light-intensity, and moderate to vigorous–intensity activity (MVPA) and bouted-MVPA (i.e., 10-minute bouts). For each metric, intraclass correlations (ICCs) and 95% CIs were calculated using linear-mixed models and adjusted for wear time, age, BMI, and season. The data were collected in 2011–2015 and analyzed in 2015–2016. Results The ICCs ranged from 0.67 (95% CI=0.60, 0.73) for bouted-MVPA to 0.82 (95% CI=0.77, 0.85) for total daily counts and were similar across age, BMI, and for less and more active women. For all metrics, classification accuracy within 1 quartile was >90%. Conclusions These data provide reassurance that a 7-day accelerometer-assessment protocol provides a reproducible (and practical) measure of physical activity and sedentary time. However, ICCs varied by metric; therefore, future prospective studies of chronic diseases might benefit from existing methods to adjust risk estimates for within-person variability in activity to get a better estimate of the true strength of association.
- Subjects :
- Epidemiology
Physical activity
Accelerometer
Article
03 medical and health sciences
0302 clinical medicine
Accelerometry
Medicine
Humans
030212 general & internal medicine
Prospective cohort study
Exercise
Sedentary lifestyle
Aged
Sedentary time
Reproducibility
business.industry
Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health
Reproducibility of Results
030229 sport sciences
Quartile
Female
Metric (unit)
Sedentary Behavior
business
Demography
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....09a51495261f4d95d19db7e589919947