Walking Research Laboratory, Department of Exercise and Wellness, Arizona State University, Mesa, Arizona 85212, USA.
Int J Behav Nutr Phys Act. 2007 Sep 27;4:45. doi: 10.1186/1479-5868-4-45.
The American Heritage Time Use Study (AHTUS) represents a harmonised historical data file of time use by adults, amalgamating surveys collected in 1965-66, 1975-76, 1985, 1992-94, and 2003. The objectives of time-use studies have ranged from evaluating household and other unpaid production of goods and services, to monitoring of media use, to comparing lifestyles of more and less privileged social groups, or to tracking broad shifts in social behaviour. The purpose of this paper is to describe the process and utility of identifying and compiling data from the AHTUS to describe a range of walking behaviours collected using time-use survey methods over almost 40 years in the USA.
This is a secondary data analysis of an existing amalgamated data set. Noting source survey-specific limitations in comparability of design, we determined age-standardized participation (and associated durations) in any walking, walking for exercise, walking for transport, walking the dog, sports/exercise (excluding walking), and all physical activity for those survey years for which sufficient relevant data details were available.
Data processing revealed inconsistencies in instrument administration, coding various types of walking and in prompting other sport/exercise across surveys. Thus for the entire period, application of inferential statistics to determine trend for a range of walking behaviours could not be done with confidence. Focusing on the two most comparable survey years, 1985 and 2003, it appears that walking for exercise in America has increased in popularity on any given day (from 2.9 to 5.4% of adults) and accumulated duration amongst those who walk for exercise (from 30 to 45 mins/day). Dog walking has decreased in popularity over the same time period (from 9.4 to 2.6%). Associated duration amongst dog walkers was stable at 30 mins/day.
The noted and sometimes substantial differences in methods between the various survey administrations preclude stringent interpretation of these trends in walking behaviours and the use of conventional application of inferential statistics to evaluate significance of time trends. Although the AHTUS offers the most comprehensive attempt at harmonization yet undertaken with these individual time-use surveys, we found that any noted cross-time changes in walking and physical activity behaviour are not easily interpreted in terms of conventional epidemiological approaches and could be true changes, artefact related to instrument and method changes, or both. Public health utilization of the AHTUS, could be enhanced with greater attention to methodological issues known to influence estimation of physical activity behaviour in population. This could be achieved with cross-disciplinary collaboration between groups of experts in the various stages of these surveys.
美国传统时间使用研究(AHTUS)代表了一个成人时间使用的协调历史数据文件,合并了 1965-66 年、1975-76 年、1985 年、1992-94 年和 2003 年收集的调查数据。时间使用研究的目的范围从评估家庭和其他无报酬的商品和服务生产,到监测媒体使用,到比较更多和较少特权社会群体的生活方式,或跟踪社会行为的广泛变化。本文的目的是描述识别和编制 AHTUS 数据的过程和效用,以描述近 40 年来在美国使用时间使用调查方法收集的一系列步行行为。
这是对现有合并数据集的二次数据分析。注意到源调查在设计可比性方面的具体限制,我们确定了在有足够相关数据细节的调查年份中,任何步行、锻炼步行、交通步行、遛狗、运动/锻炼(不包括步行)和所有身体活动的年龄标准化参与(和相关持续时间)。
数据处理揭示了仪器管理、在跨调查中对各种类型的步行和提示其他运动/锻炼的编码方面的不一致。因此,对于整个时期,不能有信心地应用推断统计来确定一系列步行行为的趋势。关注两个最可比的调查年份,即 1985 年和 2003 年,似乎表明在美国,每天锻炼步行的流行程度有所增加(成年人中从 2.9%增加到 5.4%),锻炼步行者的累计时间也有所增加(从 30 分钟/天增加到 45 分钟/天)。遛狗的流行程度在同一时期有所下降(从 9.4%下降到 2.6%)。遛狗者的相关时间保持在 30 分钟/天。
由于各种调查管理之间存在明显且有时是实质性的方法差异,因此不能严格解释这些步行行为趋势,也不能使用传统的推断统计来评估时间趋势的显著性。尽管 AHTUS 提供了迄今为止对这些个别时间使用调查进行的最全面的协调尝试,但我们发现,在步行和身体活动行为方面的任何跨时间变化都不容易用传统的流行病学方法来解释,这些变化可能是真实的,也可能是与仪器和方法变化相关的人为变化,或者两者兼而有之。公共卫生部门可以更好地利用 AHTUS,更加关注已知会影响人群中身体活动行为估计的方法问题。这可以通过在这些调查的各个阶段的专家群体之间进行跨学科合作来实现。