4.6 Article

Reproducibility and validity of the Shanghai Women's Health Study physical activity questionnaire

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY
Volume 158, Issue 11, Pages 1114-1122

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/aje/kwg255

Keywords

data collection; epidemiologic methods; exercise; questionnaires; reproducibility of results; validation studies

Funding

  1. NCI NIH HHS [R01CA70867] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NATIONAL CANCER INSTITUTE [R01CA070867] Funding Source: NIH RePORTER

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In this investigation, the authors evaluated the reproducibility and validity of the Shanghai Women's Health Study (SWHS) physical activity questionnaire (PAQ), which was administered in a cohort study of approximately 75,000 Chinese women aged 40-70 years. Reproducibility (2-year test-retest) was evaluated using kappa statistics and intraclass correlation coefficients (ICCs). Validity was evaluated by comparing Spearman correlations (r) for the SWHS PAQ with two criterion measures administered over a period of 12 months: four 7day physical activity logs and up to 28 7-day PAQs. Women were recruited from the SWHS cohort (n = 200). Results indicated that the reproducibility of adolescent and adult exercise participation (kappa = 0.85 and kappa = 0.64, respectively) and years of adolescent exercise and adult exercise energy expenditure (ICC = 0.83 and ICC = 0.70, respectively) was reasonable. Reproducibility values for adult lifestyle activities were lower (ICC = 0.14-0.54). Significant correlations between the PAQ and criterion measures of adult exercise were observed for the first PAQ administration (physical activity log, r= 0.50; 7-day PAQ, r= 0.62) and the second PAQ administration (physical activity log, r= 0.74; 7-day PAQ, r= 0.80). Significant correlations between PAO lifestyle activities and the 7-day PAO were also noted (r = 0.33-0.88). These data indicate that the SWHS PAO is a reproducible and valid measure of exercise behaviors and that it demonstrates utility in stratifying women by levels of important lifestyle activities (e.g., housework, walking, cycling).

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