4.4 Article

Accelerometer-measured stepping cadence patterns in Korean adults: an analysis of data from the 2014-2015 Korea National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey

Journal

EPIDEMIOLOGY AND HEALTH
Volume 43, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

KOREAN SOC EPIDEMIOLOGY
DOI: 10.4178/epih.e2021056

Keywords

Walking; Exercise; Sedentary Behavior; Accelerometry

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The study aimed to identify stepping cadence patterns in Korean adults using accelerometer data, finding that most time was spent at low cadence levels with only minimal time spent at high cadence levels, a trend consistent across different sex and age groups. Differences were observed in cadence categories between males and females, as well as among different age groups.
OBJECTIVES: The aim of this study was to identify the stepping cadence patterns in Korean adults by using objectively mea sured accelerometer data to analyze the time spent in each cadence category by sex and age. METHODS: During the 2014-2015 Korean National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, 1,703 males and females aged 19-64 years provided at least 1 valid day of data (wearing an accelerometer >= 10 hr/d). The mean cumulative time and percentage per day in 8 cadence categories (0, 1-19, 20-29, 30-59, 60-79, 80-99, 100-119, and >= 120 steps/min) by sex and age group were calculated. RESULTS: Cumulative time and percentage per day decreased across the incremental cadence categories. Participants spent 360.08 +/- 12.56 min/d in the non-movement cadence category and 361.5012.28 min/d in the incidental movement cadence category. However, they spent only about 18.1 min/d (2.1%) at >= 100 steps/min. Males spent significantly more time in the cadence categories of sporadic movement, purposeful steps, slow walking, and medium walking, but the other categories, except for brisk walking, had higher values in females (p <0.001). The older age group spent less time in non-movement cadence categories, and the youngest and oldest groups spent more time at a higher cadence (>= 100 steps/min) than the other age groups. Similar patterns were found in a subgroup analysis by sex. CONCLUSIONS: Korean adults spent most of their time at a low cadence and only a few minutes at a high cadence (>= 100 steps/min); this trend was consistent across sex and age groups.

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