4.6 Article

What they say and what they do: comparing physical activity across the USA, England and the Netherlands

期刊

出版社

BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1136/jech-2017-209703

关键词

physical activity; accelerometer; self-report

资金

  1. National Institute on Aging [R-37AG25529, R01AG20717]
  2. National Institute of Aging [R01AG017644]
  3. consortium of UK government departments

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Background Physical activity (PA) is important for maintaining health, but there are fundamental unanswered questions on how best it should be measured. Methods We measured PA in the Netherlands (n=748), the USA (n=540) and England (n=254), both by a 7day wrist-worn accelerometer and by self-reports. The self-reports included a global self-report on PA and a report on the frequency of vigorous, moderate and mild activity. Results The self-reported data showed only minor differences across countries and across groups within countries (such as different age groups or working vs non-working respondents). The accelerometer data, however, showed large differences; the Dutch and English appeared to be much more physically active than Americans h (For instance, among respondents aged 50 years or older 38% of Americans are in the lowest activity quintile of the Dutch distribution). In addition, accelerometer data showed a sharp decline of PA with age, while no such pattern was observed in self-reports. The differences between objective measures and self-reports occurred for both types of self-reports. Conclusion It is clear that self-reports and objective measures tell vastly different stories, suggesting that across countries people use different response scales when answering questions about how physically active they are.

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