1. Physical Activity Questionnaire for children and adolescents: English norms and cut-off points.
- Author
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Voss, Christine, Ogunleye, Ayodele A, and Sandercock, Gavin RH
- Subjects
ANALYSIS of variance ,CHI-squared test ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,STATISTICAL correlation ,PROBABILITY theory ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,REGRESSION analysis ,SELF-evaluation ,STATISTICS ,SURVEYS ,DATA analysis ,RECEIVER operating characteristic curves ,PHYSICAL activity ,DATA analysis software ,CHILDREN - Abstract
Background The Physical Activity Questionnaire for Children and Adolescents ( PAQ- C/- A) provides general estimates of physical activity levels. Following recent expert recommendations for using the PAQ for population surveillance, the aim of this paper was twofold: first, to describe normative PAQ data for English youth; and second, to determine a criterion-referenced PAQ-score cut-off point. Methods Participants ( n = 7226, 53% boys, 10-15 years) completed an anglicized version of the PAQ. Peak oxygen uptake ( VO
2peak ) was predicted from PACER lap count according to latest FITNESSGRAM standards and categorized into 'at-risk' and 'no-risk' for metabolic syndrome. R OC curves were drawn for each age-sex group to identify PAQ scores, which categorized youth into 'sufficiently active' versus 'low-active' groups, using cardiorespiratory fitness as the criterion-referenced standard. Results PAQ scores were higher in boys than in girls and declined with age. Mean PAQ score was a significant, albeit relatively weak (area under the curve < 0.7) discriminator between 'at-risk' and 'no-risk.' PAQ scores of ≥2.9 for boys and ≥2.7 for girls were identified as cut-off points, although it may be more appropriate to use lower, age-specific PAQ scores for girls of 13, 14 and 15 years (2.6, 2.4, 2.3, respectively). Conclusion The normative and criterion-referenced PAQ values may be used to standardize and categorize PAQ scores in future youth population studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2013
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