1. Validity, practical utility, and reliability of the activPAL in preschool children
- Author
-
Gwyneth Davies, Amy J. Mcgowan, John J. Reilly, Philippa M. Dall, James Y. Paton, and Malcolm H. Granat
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Sports medicine ,Intraclass correlation ,business.industry ,Monitoring, Ambulatory ,Reproducibility of Results ,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation ,Motor Activity ,medicine.disease ,Sitting ,Childhood obesity ,RC1200 ,Interquartile range ,Child, Preschool ,Activities of Daily Living ,medicine ,Physical therapy ,Humans ,Female ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,business ,Body mass index ,Reliability (statistics) ,Balance (ability) - Abstract
Purpose: With the increasing global prevalence of childhood obesity, it is important to have appropriate measurement tools for investigating factors (e.g. sedentary time) contributing to positive energy balance in early childhood. For pre-school children, single unit monitors such as the activPALTM are promising. However, validation is required as activity patterns differ from adults.\ud Methods: Thirty pre-school children participated in a validation study. Children were videoed for one hour undertaking usual nursery activity while wearing an activPALTM. Video (criterion method) was analyzed on a second-by-second basis to categorise posture and activity. This was compared with the corresponding activPALTM output. In a subsequent sub-study investigating practical utility and reliability, 20 children wore an activPALTM for seven consecutive 24-hour periods.\ud Results: A total of 97,750 seconds of direct observation from 30 children were categorized as sit/lie (46%), stand (35%), walk (16%); with 3% of time in nonsit/lie/upright postures (e.g. crawl/crouch/kneel-up). Sensitivity for the overall total time matched seconds detected as activPALTM ‘sit/lie’ was 86.7%, specificity 97.1%, and positive predictive value (PPV) 96.3%. For individual children, the median (interquartile range) sensitivity for activPALTM sit/lie was 92.8% (76.1-97.4), specificity 97.3% (94.9-99.2), PPV 97.0% (91.5-99.1). The activPALTM underestimated total time spent sitting (mean difference -4.4%, p \ud Conclusion: The activPAL had acceptable validity, practical utility, and reliability for the measurement of posture and activity during freeliving activities in pre-school children.
- Published
- 2012