O'Brien Wendy J, Shultz Sarah P, Firestone Ridvan T, George Lily, Breier Bernhard H, Kruger Rozanne
a School of Food and Nutrition , Massey University , Auckland , New Zealand.
b School of Sport and Exercise , Massey University , Wellington , New Zealand.
Eur J Sport Sci. 2017 Aug;17(7):922-930. doi: 10.1080/17461391.2017.1323952. Epub 2017 May 15.
Quality objective physical activity data are required to inform physical activity-based health improvement initiatives, however, various challenges undermine acquisition of such data. We examined the efficacy and challenges of a hip-worn accelerometry protocol in women. Specific objectives included determining accelerometer-wear-compliance rates and understanding the barriers and acceptability of wearing accelerometers. Healthy New Zealand women (n = 406) of three ethnicities (Māori (indigenous New Zealander), Pacific, European) aged 16-45 years (30.9 ± 8.7 y) wore hip-mounted Actigraph wGT3X+ accelerometers for 7 consecutive days under a 24-h wear protocol. Post hoc, a sub-sample (n = 45; age: 29.4 ± 9.0 y) was interviewed to investigate comfort/convenience and burdens of accelerometer-wear. Wear-compliance (≥10 h/day, ≥4 day) was 86%. European women returned more valid data (92.7%, p < .04) than Pacific (73.0%) or Māori women (82.1%). Twenty-two participants (5.4%) had completely missing data; 13 due to lost accelerometers. Burden of accelerometer-wear was greatest during sleeping (66.7%) due to discomfort. Embarrassment of accelerometer visibility through clothing and consequent restricted clothing choices caused high burden in social settings (45.2%). Discomfort during sleeping, embarrassment due to perceived appearance in social settings and ethnicity are key factors affecting the efficacy of collecting physical activity data from women using hip-worn accelerometers. Refining accelerometer design to reduce size and subsequently participant burden should improve acceptability and wear-compliance. Increasing overall participant compliance by reducing burden and ensuring appropriate understanding of study aims and relevance should reduce attrition and improve wear-compliance and data quality when collecting accelerometry data from women of different ethnicities.
高质量的客观身体活动数据对于基于身体活动的健康改善计划至关重要,然而,各种挑战阻碍了此类数据的获取。我们研究了一种髋部佩戴式加速度计方案在女性中的有效性和挑战。具体目标包括确定加速度计佩戴依从率,以及了解佩戴加速度计的障碍和可接受性。来自新西兰的406名16 - 45岁(平均年龄30.9±8.7岁)的健康女性,分属三个种族(毛利人(新西兰原住民)、太平洋岛民、欧洲裔),按照24小时佩戴方案,连续7天佩戴髋部安装的Actigraph wGT3X +加速度计。事后,对一个子样本(n = 45;年龄:29.4±9.0岁)进行了访谈,以调查佩戴加速度计的舒适度/便利性和负担。佩戴依从性(≥10小时/天,≥4天)为86%。欧洲裔女性返回的有效数据(92.7%,p < 0.04)比太平洋岛民女性(73.0%)或毛利族女性(82.1%)更多。22名参与者(5.4%)的数据完全缺失;其中13人是因为加速度计丢失。由于不适,佩戴加速度计的负担在睡眠期间最大(66.7%)。在社交场合中,因透过衣物可见加速度计而产生的尴尬以及随之而来的服装选择受限导致了较高的负担(45.2%)。睡眠期间的不适、社交场合中因外观问题产生的尴尬以及种族因素是影响使用髋部佩戴式加速度计从女性中收集身体活动数据有效性的关键因素。改进加速度计设计以减小尺寸并减轻参与者负担,应能提高可接受性和佩戴依从性。通过减轻负担并确保参与者对研究目的和相关性有适当理解来提高总体参与依从性,应能减少损耗,并在从不同种族女性中收集加速度计数据时提高佩戴依从性和数据质量。