Performance of the international physical activity questionnaire (short form) in subgroups of the Hong Kong chinese population
Performance of the international physical activity questionnaire (short form) in subgroups of the Hong Kong chinese population
Background: The International Physical Activity Questionnaire (IPAQ-SF) has been validated and recommended as an efficient method to assess physical activity, but its validity has not been investigated in different population subgroups. We examined variations in IPAQ validity in the Hong Kong Chinese population by six factors: sex, age, job status, educational level, body mass index (BMI), and visceral fat level (VFL).Methods: A total of 1,270 adults (aged 42.9 ± SD 14.4 years, 46.1% male) completed the Chinese version of IPAQ (IPAQ-C) and wore an accelerometer (ActiGraph) for four days afterwards. The IPAQ-C and the ActiGraph were compared in terms of estimated Metabolic Equivalent Task minutes per week (MET-min/wk), minutes spent in activity of moderate or vigorous intensity (MVPA), and agreement in the classification of physical activity.Results: The overall Spearman correlation (ρ) of between the IPAQ-C and ActiGraph was low (0.11 ± 0.03; range in subgroups 0.06-0.24) and was the highest among high VFL participants (0.24 ± 0.05). Difference between self-reported and ActiGraph-derived MET-min/wk (overall 2966 ± 140) was the smallest among participants with tertiary education (1804 ± 208). When physical activity was categorized into over or under 150 min/wk, overall agreement between self-report and accelerometer was 81.3% (± 1.1%; subgroup range: 77.2%-91.4%); agreement was the highest among those who were employed full-time in physically demanding jobs (91.4% ± 2.7%).Conclusions: Sex, age, job status, educational level, and obesity were found to influence the criterion validity of IPAQ-C, yet none of the subgroups showed good validity (ρ = 0.06 to 0.24). IPAQ-SF validity is questionable in our Chinese population.
Accelerometry, Assessment, Exercise, MET, Validation
Lee, Paul H.
02620eab-ae7f-4a1c-bad1-8a50e7e48951
Yu, Y. Y.
3ab8a0fe-8340-4f54-8a0b-14dbb402c7fd
McDowell, Ian
d45606ed-356e-4ab0-9611-a106f332959e
Leung, Gabriel M.
05520107-4b1b-4adf-a291-20f4d8941219
Lam, T. H.
342e044c-2bbc-413c-b3fb-ad2c399b5fb7
Stewart, Sunita M.
0a7cdd7b-a005-43fa-9b62-f648894630fe
1 August 2011
Lee, Paul H.
02620eab-ae7f-4a1c-bad1-8a50e7e48951
Yu, Y. Y.
3ab8a0fe-8340-4f54-8a0b-14dbb402c7fd
McDowell, Ian
d45606ed-356e-4ab0-9611-a106f332959e
Leung, Gabriel M.
05520107-4b1b-4adf-a291-20f4d8941219
Lam, T. H.
342e044c-2bbc-413c-b3fb-ad2c399b5fb7
Stewart, Sunita M.
0a7cdd7b-a005-43fa-9b62-f648894630fe
Lee, Paul H., Yu, Y. Y., McDowell, Ian, Leung, Gabriel M., Lam, T. H. and Stewart, Sunita M.
(2011)
Performance of the international physical activity questionnaire (short form) in subgroups of the Hong Kong chinese population.
International Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity, 8, [81].
(doi:10.1186/1479-5868-8-81).
Abstract
Background: The International Physical Activity Questionnaire (IPAQ-SF) has been validated and recommended as an efficient method to assess physical activity, but its validity has not been investigated in different population subgroups. We examined variations in IPAQ validity in the Hong Kong Chinese population by six factors: sex, age, job status, educational level, body mass index (BMI), and visceral fat level (VFL).Methods: A total of 1,270 adults (aged 42.9 ± SD 14.4 years, 46.1% male) completed the Chinese version of IPAQ (IPAQ-C) and wore an accelerometer (ActiGraph) for four days afterwards. The IPAQ-C and the ActiGraph were compared in terms of estimated Metabolic Equivalent Task minutes per week (MET-min/wk), minutes spent in activity of moderate or vigorous intensity (MVPA), and agreement in the classification of physical activity.Results: The overall Spearman correlation (ρ) of between the IPAQ-C and ActiGraph was low (0.11 ± 0.03; range in subgroups 0.06-0.24) and was the highest among high VFL participants (0.24 ± 0.05). Difference between self-reported and ActiGraph-derived MET-min/wk (overall 2966 ± 140) was the smallest among participants with tertiary education (1804 ± 208). When physical activity was categorized into over or under 150 min/wk, overall agreement between self-report and accelerometer was 81.3% (± 1.1%; subgroup range: 77.2%-91.4%); agreement was the highest among those who were employed full-time in physically demanding jobs (91.4% ± 2.7%).Conclusions: Sex, age, job status, educational level, and obesity were found to influence the criterion validity of IPAQ-C, yet none of the subgroups showed good validity (ρ = 0.06 to 0.24). IPAQ-SF validity is questionable in our Chinese population.
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Published date: 1 August 2011
Keywords:
Accelerometry, Assessment, Exercise, MET, Validation
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Local EPrints ID: 480698
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/480698
ISSN: 1479-5868
PURE UUID: 24ae4f19-a45b-462c-a8bb-6384eb52d582
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Date deposited: 08 Aug 2023 16:52
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:17
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Author:
Paul H. Lee
Author:
Y. Y. Yu
Author:
Ian McDowell
Author:
Gabriel M. Leung
Author:
T. H. Lam
Author:
Sunita M. Stewart
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