Abstract

Health policies rely on physical activity (PA) and sedentary behavior data collected through PA questionnaires (PAQs). Validity of international PAQs varies among countries. Therefore, it is important to know the validity of the national versions of the PAQs to properly evaluate the results. We conducted a validation study of the Slovenian versions of the International PAQ Short Form (IPAQ-SF), the Global PAQ (GPAQ), and the PAQ used in the European Health Interview Survey (EHIS-PAQ) on 306 healthy adults. The most valid and reliable constructs in all tested were sedentary behavior and vigorous PA (VPA), however the criterion validity of these constructs was low (Spearman’s ρ 0.38–0.45 for sedentary behavior and 0.34–0.42 for VPA). Moderate to vigorous PA (MVPA) had low validity (0.26–0.29) despite being used as a standard measure of PA behavior. Participants over-reported MVPA for 17 to 156 min and underreported the sedentary behavior for more than two hours. The test-retest study found high reliability for sedentary behavior (0.69–0.81) and low to moderate reliability for PA behavior (0.42–0.76). The Slovenian versions of the observed PAQs are a useful tool for national PA surveillance, but for qualitative assessment of individual health-related PA behavior they should be combined with accelerometer-based devices.

Highlights

  • Regular physical activity and sedentariness are independent risk factors for several health conditions: cardiovascular disease and adiposity [1], all-cause mortality [2], type 2 diabetes [3], and some cancers [4]

  • There were statistically significant gender differences in MPA, vigorous PA (VPA), and Moderate to vigorous PA (MVPA) measured with accelerometer UKK RM42 and in self-reported VPA

  • The metadata on the physical activity questionnaires (PAQs) showed that participants spent from two to almost four minutes to complete each of the PAQs

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Summary

Introduction

Regular physical activity and sedentariness are independent risk factors for several health conditions: cardiovascular disease and adiposity [1], all-cause mortality [2], type 2 diabetes [3], and some cancers [4]. They are associated with metabolic [5], mental [6], and cognitive health [7]. Device-based measurement (e.g., accelerometers, wristbands, smart watches) is emerging. Such measurement is more valid and reliable compared to the use of physical activity questionnaires (PAQs) as a subjective method [8], and more time-consuming and expensive [9].

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