1. International Physical Activity and Built Environment Study of Adolescents : IPEN Adolescent design, protocol and measures
- Author
-
Rodrigo Siqueira Reis, Mohammed Zakiul Islam, Anthony Barnett, Tanja Schmidt, Erica Hinckson, Wan Abdul Manan Wan Muda, Maria Paula Santos, Javier Molina-García, Delfien Van Dyck, Ranjit Mohan Anjana, Jasper Schipperijn, Jan Dygrýn, Kelli L. Cain, Grant Schofield, Ester Cerin, Lawrence D. Frank, Adewale L. Oyeyemi, Terry L. Conway, Jo Salmon, Mika Moran, Josef Mitáš, James F. Sallis, and Anna Timperio
- Subjects
Male ,NEIGHBORHOOD ENVIRONMENT ,statistics & research methods ,Walking ,Overweight ,Cardiovascular ,Oral and gastrointestinal ,0302 clinical medicine ,research methods ,Belgium ,Residence Characteristics ,Informed assent ,Research Methods ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Medicine ,SOCIOECONOMIC-STATUS ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Israel ,Built Environment ,Aetiology ,Child ,Built environment ,Czech Republic ,Cancer ,Pediatric ,Bangladesh ,public health ,SEDENTARY BEHAVIOR ,General Medicine ,Stroke ,YOUTH ,Walkability ,RELIABILITY ,Public Health and Health Services ,Hong Kong ,Female ,epidemiology ,SCHOOL-AGED CHILDREN ,HEALTH ,PSYCHOSOCIAL FACTORS ,medicine.symptom ,social and economic factors ,Brazil ,Pediatric Research Initiative ,Adolescent ,International studies ,Clinical Sciences ,Nigeria ,India ,preventive medicine ,03 medical and health sciences ,Young Adult ,2.3 Psychological ,Environmental health ,Humans ,Obesity ,Socioeconomic status ,Exercise ,Metabolic and endocrine ,Nutrition ,OBJECTIVE ASSESSMENT ,WALKABILITY SCALE ,Other Medical and Health Sciences ,Portugal ,business.industry ,Prevention ,Malaysia ,Australia ,030229 sport sciences ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Spain ,Survey data collection ,Observational study ,Environment Design ,statistics & ,business ,New Zealand - Abstract
IntroductionOnly international studies can provide the full variability of built environments and accurately estimate effect sizes of relations between contrasting environments and health-related outcomes. The aims of the International Physical Activity and Environment Study of Adolescents (IPEN Adolescent) are to estimate the strength, shape and generalisability of associations of the community environment (geographic information systems (GIS)-based and self-reported) with physical activity and sedentary behaviour (accelerometer-measured and self-reported) and weight status (normal/overweight/obese).Methods and analysisThe IPEN Adolescent observational, cross-sectional, multicountry study involves recruiting adolescent participants (ages 11–19 years) and one parent/guardian from neighbourhoods selected to ensure wide variations in walkability and socioeconomic status using common protocols and measures. Fifteen geographically, economically and culturally diverse countries, from six continents, participated: Australia, Bangladesh, Belgium, Brazil, Czech Republic, Denmark, Hong Kong SAR, India, Israel, Malaysia, New Zealand, Nigeria, Portugal, Spain and USA. Countries provided survey and accelerometer data (15 countries), GIS data (11), global positioning system data (10), and pedestrian environment audit data (8). A sample of n=6950 (52.6% female; mean age=14.5, SD=1.7) adolescents provided survey data, n=4852 had 4 or more 8+ hours valid days of accelerometer data, and n=5473 had GIS measures. Physical activity and sedentary behaviour were measured by waist-worn ActiGraph accelerometers and self-reports, and body mass index was used to categorise weight status.Ethics and disseminationEthical approval was received from each study site’s Institutional Review Board for their in-country studies. Informed assent by adolescents and consent by parents was obtained for all participants. No personally identifiable information was transferred to the IPEN coordinating centre for pooled datasets. Results will be communicated through standard scientific channels and findings used to advance the science of environmental correlates of physical activity, sedentary behaviour and weight status, with the ultimate goal to stimulate and guide actions to create more activity-supportive environments internationally.
- Published
- 2021