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Utilization and Harmonization of Adult Accelerometry Data: Review and Expert Consensus

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posted on 2016-02-09, 14:59 authored by K. Wijndaele, K. Westgate, S. K. Stephens, S. N. Blair, F. C. Bull, S. F. M. Chastin, D. W. Dunstan, U. Ekelund, D. W. Esliger, P. S. Freedson, M. H. Granat, C. E. Matthews, N. Owen, Alexander Viktor Rowlands, L. B. Sherar, M. S. Tremblay, R. P. Troiano, S. Brage, G. N. Healy
Purpose: This study aimed to describe the scope of accelerometry data collected internationally in adults and to obtain a consensus from measurement experts regarding the optimal strategies to harmonize international accelerometry data. Methods: In March 2014, a comprehensive review was undertaken to identify studies that collected accelerometry data in adults (sample size, n ≥ 400). In addition, 20 physical activity experts were invited to participate in a two-phase Delphi process to obtain consensus on the following: unique research opportunities available with such data, additional data required to address these opportunities, strategies for enabling comparisons between studies/countries, requirements for implementing/progressing such strategies, and value of a global repository of accelerometry data. Results: The review identified accelerometry data from more than 275,000 adults from 76 studies across 36 countries. Consensus was achieved after two rounds of the Delphi process; 18 experts participated in one or both rounds. The key opportunities highlighted were the ability for cross-country/cross-population comparisons and the analytic options available with the larger heterogeneity and greater statistical power. Basic sociodemographic and anthropometric data were considered a prerequisite for this. Disclosure of monitor specifications and protocols for data collection and processing were deemed essential to enable comparison and data harmonization. There was strong consensus that standardization of data collection, processing, and analytical procedures was needed. To implement these strategies, communication and consensus among researchers, development of an online infrastructure, and methodological comparison work were required. There was consensus that a global accelerometry data repository would be beneficial and worthwhile. Conclusions: This foundational resource can lead to implementation of key priority areas and identification of future directions in physical activity epidemiology, population monitoring, and burden of disease estimates.

History

Citation

Medicine And Science In Sports And Exercise, 2015, 47 (10), pp. 2129-2139 (11)

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF MEDICINE, BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES AND PSYCHOLOGY/School of Medicine

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Medicine And Science In Sports And Exercise

Publisher

American College of Sports Medicine (ACSM), Lippincott, Williams & Wilkins

issn

0195-9131

eissn

1530-0315

Acceptance date

2015-02-01

Copyright date

2015

Available date

2016-02-09

Publisher version

http://journals.lww.com/acsm-msse/pages/articleviewer.aspx?year=2015&issue=10000&article=00015&type=abstract

Language

en