Validity and Reproducibility of Physical Activity Questionnaires

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Reproducibility of Physical Activity Questionnaires Lisa Chasan-Taber , Sc.D. Patty S. Freedso Ph.D.

description

Validity and Reproducibility of Physical Activity Questionnaires. Lisa Chasan-Taber , Sc.D. Patty S. Freedson , Ph.D. Chasan-Taber Physical activity and pregnancy Effect on maternal/fetal disorders Development & validation of measurement tools Reproductive & perinatal epidemiology - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Validity and Reproducibility of Physical Activity Questionnaires

Page 1: Validity and Reproducibility of Physical Activity Questionnaires

Validity and Reproducibility of Physical Activity

Questionnaires

Lisa Chasan-Taber, Sc.D. Patty S. Freedson, Ph.D.

Page 2: Validity and Reproducibility of Physical Activity Questionnaires

Research Interests

Chasan-Taber• Physical activity and

pregnancy– Effect on maternal/fetal

disorders– Development &

validation of measurement tools

• Reproductive & perinatal epidemiology

• Women's health

Freedson• Children's responses to

exercise• Exercise and women's

health• Determinants of

performance and fitness • Development and

validation of objective techniques to assess habitual physical activity

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Learning Objectives

1. To understand the need for evaluation of physical activity questionnaires

2. To understand the role of subjective and objective measures of physical activity in validity/reproducibility studies.

3. To understand approaches for analyzing validity/reproducibility studies.

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Performance Objectives

• Students should be able to design a study to assess the validity & reproducibility of a physical activity questionnaire.

• Be able to interpret the findings from a validity/reproducibility study.

• Be able to present findings from a reproducibility/validity study.

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Overview

1. Need for Evaluation of Physical Activity Questionnaires

2. Reproducibility Studies: Design, Analysis, & Presentation

3. Validity Studies: Design, Analysis, & Presentation

4. Future Directions

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Associations Between Physical Activity and

Disease

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Sedentary Occasional Conditioning Exercisers Exercisers

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Kujala, UM et al., JAMA 279:440-444, 1998

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Why are Questionnaires used to Measure Physical Activity in Epidemiologic Studies?

• Advantages– Practical for large sample sizes– Non-reactive– Tailored to specific populations and

time periods

• Disadvantages– Precision

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The Need for Validation of Physical Activity Questionnaires• Physical activity is a complex behavior

difficult to measure accurately– Based upon self-report – Includes unstructured activities

• Individuals rarely make clear changes in their activity at identifiable points in time.

• Activity intensity may vary from person to person

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Definition of Terms: Reproducibility

The consistency of questionnaire measurements •on more than one administration, •to the same people, •at different times.

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Definition of Terms: Validity

The degree to which the questionnaire actually measures the aspect of physical activity that it was designed to measure.• Type • Frequency• Duration• Intensity

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When to Perform Reproducibility/Validity Studies?

1. For new questionnaires.2. When a questionnaire is modified.3. When questionnaires will be used

in a different population according to:

– Age– Gender– Culture– Physical activity profile

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Design of Reproducibility Studies

1 s t M ea su rem en t 2 n d M ea su rem en t

Specify time interval

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Analysis of Reproducibility Studies

ICC

Total Activity 0.81

By Intensity

Light -Intensity Activity 0.64

Moderate -Intensity Activity 0.78

Vigorous -Intensity Activity

0.85

By Type

Occupational Activity

Recreational Activity 0.78

Household Activity 0.73

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Interpretation of Results from Reproducibility Studies

High reliability

High validity

High reliability

Low validity

Figure 1. Figure 2.

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Validity Studies: Choice of a Comparison Measure

• Use superior method as a comparison.

• No gold standard exists. • Use a method with different

sources of error.

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Comparison Measures• Subjective

– Physical activity logs (PALs)– 24 hour recall– 7 day recall– Previous month recall– Previous year recall

• Objective– Accelerometers– Heart rate monitoring– Doubly labeled water– Direct observation

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Subjective Comparison Measures- Physical Activity Logs (PALs)

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Advantages and Disadvantages of PALs as Comparison Measures

• Advantages– Open-ended– Alleviate memory difficulties

• Disadvantages– Subject cooperation and motivation– May alter normal activity– Share error of self report

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Computation of Summary Estimates from Subjective Measures

Frequency

1 times/day

Duration

2 hours/day

Intensity

5 METs

Total Energy Expenditure

30 MET-hrs/day

X X

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Objective Comparison Measures - Accelerometers

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Example Accelerometer Data

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METS

Accelerometer Counts

<3METS

3-6METS

6-9METS

>9 METS

Computation of Summary Estimates from Accelerometer

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Example of Summary Estimates from Accelerometer

Day Min Min Total X Counts/ Mod Vig Counts Min

1 52 130 1247890 1122

2 16 141 1181263 1238

3 14 138 1135351 1169

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Design of Validity Studies

Questionnaire1st Admin.

Questionnaire2nd Admin.

ComparisonmeasureWinter

ComparisonmeasureSpring

ComparisonmeasureSummer

Comparisonmeasure

Fall

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Design of a Validation Study (Continued)

• The number of administrations of the comparison method should be based upon– Questionnaire time frame– Variation in physical activity– Subject burden

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Data Analysis & Presentation

Pearson Correlation Coefficients

Total Activity 0.50

By Intensity

Light 0.45

Moderate

0.55

Vigorous 0.70

By Type

Occupational 0.47

Recreational 0.60

Household 0.58

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Interpretation of Results from Validity Studies

• High validity may reflect correlated error– If both omit a source of activity– If both include questions that are

misinterpreted– If both rely upon self-report

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Summary• Evaluation of physical activity

questionnaires is critical• Goal is to assess typical or usual activity • A variety of comparison methods are

available• Study design should be tailored to the

specific population• Interpretation of results should be informed

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Future Directions• How much physical activity (dose) is needed

for health (response)? – Intensity– Duration– Frequency

• Improvements and standardization of methods to assess and validate physical activity.

• How sensitive are self-report and objective measures in detecting change consequent to physical activity interventions?