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  5. Assessment of Sedentary Behavior With the International Physical Activity Questionnaire

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Article
en
2008

Assessment of Sedentary Behavior With the International Physical Activity Questionnaire

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0 Files

en
2008
Vol 5 (s1)
Vol. 5
DOI: 10.1123/jpah.5.s1.s30

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James Sallis
James Sallis

University Of California, San Diego

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Dori E. Rosenberg
Fiona Bull
Alison L. Marshall
+2 more

Abstract

Purpose: This study explored definitions of sedentary behavior and examined the relationship between sitting time and physical inactivity using the sitting items from the International Physical Activity Questionnaire (IPAQ). Methods: Participants (N = 289, 44.6% male, mean age = 35.93) from 3 countries completed self-administered long- and short-IPAQ sitting items. Participants wore accelero-meters; were classified as inactive (no leisure-time activity), insufficiently active, or meeting recommendations; and were classified into tertiles of sitting behavior. Results: Reliability of sitting time was acceptable for men and women. Correlations between total sitting and accelerometer counts/min <100 were significant for both long ( r = .33) and short ( r = .34) forms. There was no agreement between tertiles of sitting and the inactivity category (kappa = .02, P = .68). Conclusion: Sedentary behavior should be explicitly measured in population surveillance and research instead of being defined by lack of physical activity.

How to cite this publication

Dori E. Rosenberg, Fiona Bull, Alison L. Marshall, James Sallis, Adrian Bauman (2008). Assessment of Sedentary Behavior With the International Physical Activity Questionnaire. , 5(s1), DOI: https://doi.org/10.1123/jpah.5.s1.s30.

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Publication Details

Type

Article

Year

2008

Authors

5

Datasets

0

Total Files

0

Language

en

DOI

https://doi.org/10.1123/jpah.5.s1.s30

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