12 research outputs found
Confusion and Conflict in Assessing the Physical Activity Status of Middle-Aged Men
BACKGROUND: Physical activity (including exercise) is prescribed for health and there are various recommendations that can be used to gauge physical activity status. The objective of the current study was to determine whether twelve commonly-used physical activity recommendations similarly classified middle-aged men as sufficiently active for general health. METHODS AND FINDINGS: We examined the commonality in the classification of physical activity status between twelve variations of physical activity recommendations for general health in ninety men aged 45-64 years. Physical activity was assessed using synchronised accelerometry and heart rate. Using different guidelines but the same raw data, the proportion of men defined as active ranged from to 11% to 98% for individual recommendations (median 73%, IQR 30% to 87%). There was very poor absolute agreement between the recommendations, with an intraclass correlation coefficient (A,1) of 0.24 (95% CI, 0.15 to 0.34). Only 8% of men met all 12 recommendations and would therefore be unanimously classified as active and only one man failed to meet every recommendation and would therefore be unanimously classified as not sufficiently active. The wide variability in physical activity classification was explained by ostensibly subtle differences between the 12 recommendations for thresholds related to activity volume (time or energy), distribution (e.g., number of days of the week), moderate intensity cut-point (e.g., 3 vs. 4 metabolic equivalents or METs), and duration (including bout length). CONCLUSIONS: Physical activity status varies enormously depending on the physical activity recommendation that is applied and even ostensibly small differences have a major impact. Approximately nine out of every ten men in the present study could be variably described as either active or not sufficiently active. Either the effective dose or prescription that underlies each physical activity recommendation is different or each recommendation is seeking the same prescriptive outcome but with variable success
The proportion of middle-aged men in this sample who either met or failed to meet each of the 10 recommendations (nβ=β90).
<p>The proportion of middle-aged men in this sample who either met or failed to meet each of the 10 recommendations (nβ=β90).</p
Mean time per day engaged in physical activity above critical thresholds for men aged 45β64 (nβ=β90).
<p>METs<sup>10</sup> represents time engaged in activity above each respective threshold in bouts of at least 10 min.</p
A summary of the physical activity recommendations and definitions that were assessed in the present comparison.
*<p>We have assumed that the requirement to undertake activity is >3 METs and in bouts of 10 min because this is a feature of the βtimeβ expression of this recommendation. This is not explicit but we felt that any other interpretation would be inappropriate (see <a href="http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0004337#s2" target="_blank">methods</a> for details).</p
Ranked individual data for total MET<sup>.</sup>min per week (Figure 2a) which is equivalent to the ACSM/AHA<sup>2</sup> recommendation, PAL (Figure 2b) which is the basis for the IOM<sup>1</sup> recommendation, and average minutes of moderate intensity physical above 3 METs per day, which is the basis for IOM<sup>2</sup> (Figure 2c).
<p>The horizontal dashed line indicates the threshold identified for each recommendation - every person above this threshold meets each respective recommendation. The shaded columns indicate where this particular subject also met the current ACSM/AHA<sup>1</sup> recommendation (i.e., either 5 days of moderate activity or 3 days of vigorous activity).</p