19 research outputs found

    How Many Days of Pedometer Monitoring Predict Weekly Physical Activity in Adults?

    No full text
    Background. The study purpose was to establish the number (and type) of days needed to estimate mean pedometer-determined steps/day in a field setting. Methods. Seven days of data were collected from 90 participants (33 males, AGE = 49.1 ± 16.2 years, BMI = 27.2 ± 4.1 kg/m2; 57 females, AGE = 44.8 ± 16.9 years, BMI = 27.0 ± 5.9 kg/m2). Mean steps/day were computed for all 7 days (the criterion), each single day, and combinations of days. Analyses included repeated measures ANOVA, intra-class correlations (ICC), and regression. Results. There was a significant difference (P < 0.001) between days. The difference was limited to Sunday and accounted for 5% of the variance. ICC analyses indicated a minimum of 3 days is necessary to achieve a reliability of 0.80. The adjusted R2 was 0.79 for a single day (specifically Wednesday), 0.89 for 2 days (Wednesday, Thursday), and 0.94 for 3 days (Wednesday, Thursday, Friday). Sunday was the last day to enter the model. Conclusions. Although there is a statistical difference between days, there is little practical difference, and the primary distinction appears limited to Sunday. Although a single day of collection is not acceptable, any 3 days can provide a sufficient estimate

    Race, Genetics and Health: An Introduction

    No full text
    Health disparities, Race, Ethnicity, Genes, Race-specific illnesses, Race-specific diseases, Individualized medicine, Racialized medicine, BiDil, Pharmacogenetics, Genomics,
    corecore