Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Lethbridge, Lethbridge, Alberta, Canada
Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Lethbridge, Lethbridge, Alberta, Canada.
BMJ Open. 2024 Jul 24;14(7):e082275. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2023-082275.
Global surveillance of physical activity (PA) of children and adolescents with questionnaires is limited by the use of instruments developed in high-income countries (HICs) lacking sociocultural adaptation, especially in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs); under-representation of some PA domains; and omission of active play, an important source of PA. Addressing these limitations would help improve international comparisons, and facilitate the cross-fertilisation of ideas to promote PA. We aim to develop and assess the reliability and validity of the app-based Global Adolescent and Child Physical Activity Questionnaire (GAC-PAQ) among 8-17 years old in 14 LMICs and HICs representing all continents; and generate the 'first available data' on active play in most participating countries.
Our study involves eight stages: (1) systematic review of psychometric properties of existing PA questionnaires for children and adolescents; (2) development of the GAC-PAQ (first version); (3) content validity assessment with global experts; (4) cognitive interviews with children/adolescents and parents in all 14 countries; (5) development of a revised GAC-PAQ; (6) development and adaptation of the questionnaire app (application); (7) pilot-test of the app-based GAC-PAQ; and, (8) main study with a stratified, sex-balanced and urban/rural-balanced sample of 500 children/adolescents and one of their parents/guardians per country. Participants will complete the GAC-PAQ twice to assess 1-week test-retest reliability and wear an ActiGraph wGT3X-BT accelerometer for 9 days to test concurrent validity. To assess convergent validity, subsamples (50 adolescents/country) will simultaneously complete the PA module from existing international surveys.
Approvals from research ethics boards and relevant organisations will be obtained in all participating countries. We anticipate that the GAC-PAQ will facilitate global surveillance of PA in children/adolescents. Our project includes a robust knowledge translation strategy sensitive to social determinants of health to inform inclusive surveillance and PA interventions globally.
利用问卷对儿童和青少年的身体活动(PA)进行全球监测受到限制,因为这些问卷所使用的工具是在高收入国家(HICs)开发的,缺乏社会文化适应性,特别是在低收入和中等收入国家(LMICs);一些 PA 领域代表性不足;以及忽略了积极玩耍,这是 PA 的一个重要来源。解决这些限制将有助于改善国际比较,并促进促进 PA 的思想交流。我们旨在为来自 14 个 LMIC 和 HIC 的 8-17 岁儿童和青少年开发和评估基于应用程序的全球青少年和儿童身体活动问卷(GAC-PAQ)的可靠性和有效性;并在大多数参与国家生成关于积极玩耍的“首批可用数据”。
我们的研究包括八个阶段:(1)系统回顾儿童和青少年现有 PA 问卷的心理测量学特性;(2)开发 GAC-PAQ(第一版);(3)与全球专家进行内容有效性评估;(4)在所有 14 个国家对儿童/青少年和家长进行认知访谈;(5)开发修订后的 GAC-PAQ;(6)开发和改编问卷应用程序(应用程序);(7)基于应用程序的 GAC-PAQ 试点测试;(8)主要研究,每个国家选择 500 名儿童/青少年及其父母/监护人之一进行分层、性别平衡和城乡平衡的样本。参与者将完成两次 GAC-PAQ 以评估 1 周的测试-重测信度,并佩戴 ActiGraph wGT3X-BT 加速度计 9 天以测试同时效度。为了评估收敛效度,将从每个国家的子样本(50 名青少年/国家)同时完成现有的国际调查中的 PA 模块。
将在所有参与国家获得研究伦理委员会和相关组织的批准。我们预计 GAC-PAQ 将促进儿童和青少年 PA 的全球监测。我们的项目包括一个稳健的知识转化策略,对健康的社会决定因素敏感,以在全球范围内提供包容性的监测和 PA 干预措施。