Walking Behavior Laboratory, Pennington Biomedical Research Center, Baton Rouge, LA, USA.
Int J Behav Nutr Phys Act. 2011 Jul 28;8:79. doi: 10.1186/1479-5868-8-79.
Physical activity guidelines from around the world are typically expressed in terms of frequency, duration, and intensity parameters. Objective monitoring using pedometers and accelerometers offers a new opportunity to measure and communicate physical activity in terms of steps/day. Various step-based versions or translations of physical activity guidelines are emerging, reflecting public interest in such guidance. However, there appears to be a wide discrepancy in the exact values that are being communicated. It makes sense that step-based recommendations should be harmonious with existing evidence-based public health guidelines that recognize that "some physical activity is better than none" while maintaining a focus on time spent in moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA). Thus, the purpose of this review was to update our existing knowledge of "How many steps/day are enough?", and to inform step-based recommendations consistent with current physical activity guidelines. Normative data indicate that healthy adults typically take between 4,000 and 18,000 steps/day, and that 10,000 steps/day is reasonable for this population, although there are notable "low active populations." Interventions demonstrate incremental increases on the order of 2,000-2,500 steps/day. The results of seven different controlled studies demonstrate that there is a strong relationship between cadence and intensity. Further, despite some inter-individual variation, 100 steps/minute represents a reasonable floor value indicative of moderate intensity walking. Multiplying this cadence by 30 minutes (i.e., typical of a daily recommendation) produces a minimum of 3,000 steps that is best used as a heuristic (i.e., guiding) value, but these steps must be taken over and above habitual activity levels to be a true expression of free-living steps/day that also includes recommendations for minimal amounts of time in MVPA. Computed steps/day translations of time in MVPA that also include estimates of habitual activity levels equate to 7,100 to 11,000 steps/day. A direct estimate of minimal amounts of MVPA accumulated in the course of objectively monitored free-living behaviour is 7,000-8,000 steps/day. A scale that spans a wide range of incremental increases in steps/day and is congruent with public health recognition that "some physical activity is better than none," yet still incorporates step-based translations of recommended amounts of time in MVPA may be useful in research and practice. The full range of users (researchers to practitioners to the general public) of objective monitoring instruments that provide step-based outputs require good reference data and evidence-based recommendations to be able to design effective health messages congruent with public health physical activity guidelines, guide behaviour change, and ultimately measure, track, and interpret steps/day.
来自世界各地的身体活动指南通常以频率、持续时间和强度参数来表示。使用计步器和加速度计进行客观监测为以步数/天来衡量和交流身体活动提供了新的机会。各种基于步数的身体活动指南版本或翻译正在出现,反映了公众对此类指导的兴趣。然而,所传达的准确值似乎存在很大差异。基于步数的建议应该与现有的基于证据的公共卫生指南保持一致,这是有道理的,因为这些指南认识到“有些身体活动总比没有好”,同时仍然关注中等至剧烈体力活动(MVPA)所花费的时间,这是有意义的。因此,本综述的目的是更新我们现有的“每天需要走多少步?”的知识,并根据当前的身体活动指南提供基于步数的建议。规范数据表明,健康成年人通常每天走 4,000 到 18,000 步,对于这部分人群来说,每天走 10,000 步是合理的,尽管存在明显的“低活跃人群”。干预措施表明,每天大约增加 2,000-2,500 步。七项不同对照研究的结果表明,步频和强度之间存在很强的关系。此外,尽管存在个体间的差异,但 100 步/分钟代表了中等强度步行的合理下限值。将此步频乘以 30 分钟(即日常推荐值),可产生至少 3,000 步,可作为启发式(即指导性)值使用,但这些步数必须超过习惯性活动水平,才能真正反映出自由生活的步数/天,同时还包括对最小 MVPA 时间的建议。将 MVPA 时间转换为计算得出的步数/天,并包括对习惯性活动水平的估计,相当于每天 7,100 到 11,000 步。通过客观监测的自由生活行为中积累的最低量的 MVPA 的直接估计是每天 7,000-8,000 步。一个范围广泛的、与公众健康认识相一致的、逐步增加的步数/天的量表,即“有些身体活动总比没有好”,但仍包含基于步数的推荐 MVPA 时间的翻译,可能在研究和实践中是有用的。客观监测仪器的所有用户(研究人员、从业者到普通大众)都需要良好的参考数据和基于证据的建议,以便能够设计与公共卫生身体活动指南相一致的有效健康信息,指导行为改变,并最终衡量、跟踪和解释步数/天。