posted on 2018-03-06, 14:29authored byKieran P. Dowd, Helen Purtill, Deirdre M. Harrington, Jane F. Hislop, John J. Reilly, Alan Edward Donnelly
Objectives: This study aims to determine the minimum number of days of monitoring required to reliably predict sitting/lying time, standing time, light intensity physical activity (LIPA), moderate-to-vigorous intensity physical activity (MVPA) and steps in adolescent females. Methods: 195 adolescent females (mean age = 15.7 years; SD = 0.9) participated in the study. Participants wore the activPAL activity monitor for a seven day protocol. The amount of time spent sitting/lying, standing, in LIPA and in MVPA and the number of steps per day were quantified. Spearman-Brown Prophecy formulae were used to predict the number of days of data required to achieve an intraclass correlation coefficient of both 0.7 and 0.8. Results: For the percentage of the waking day spent sitting/lying, standing, in LIPA and in MVPA, a minimum of 9 days of accelerometer recording is required to achieve a reliability of >= 0.7, while a minimum of 15 days is required to achieve a reliability of >= 0.8. For steps, a minimum of 12 days of recording is required to achieve a reliability of >= 0.7, with 21 days to achieve a reliability of >= 0.8. Conclusion: Future research in adolescent females should collect a minimum of 9 days of accelerometer data to reliably estimate sitting/lying time, standing time, LIPA and MVPA, while 12 days is required to reliably estimate steps.
Funding
Using the Cloud to Streamline the Development of Mobile Phone Apps
This is an Author's Accepted Manuscript of an article whose final and definitive form, the Version of Record, has been published in Pediatric Exercise Science 2017, 29 (3), pp. 427-433 copyright Human Kinetics available online at: https://doi.org/10.1123/pes.2016-0188