Abstract

BackgroundEvidence on the detrimental health effects of prolonged sedentary behavior is accumulating. Interventions need to have a specific focus on sedentary behavior in order to generate clinically meaningful decreases in sedentary time. When evaluating such intervention, the question whether a participant improved or deteriorated their behavior is fundamental and instruments that are able to detect those changes are essential. Therefore, the aim of this study was to determine the criterion validity against activPAL and responsiveness to change of two activity monitors (ActiGraph and activPAL) and two questionnaires for the assessment of occupational sitting and standing time.Methods42 participants took part in the Stand@Work intervention trial. Six (T0) and two (T1) weeks before they received a sit-stand workstation and three weeks thereafter (T2), participants wore an ActiGraph and an activPAL activity monitor, and completed the Occupational Sitting and Physical Activity Questionnaire (OSPAQ) and the Workforce Sitting Questionnaire (WSQ). The activPAL was used as the criterion validity measure.ResultsThe ActiGraph showed strong validity for occupational sedentary time at T0 and T1 (Spearman rho = 0.77 and 0.69), but its validity dropped substantially after introduction of the sit-stand workstation (rho = 0.19). Correlations between occupational light-intensity activity assessed by the ActiGraph and occupational standing time assessed by the activPAL varied between 0.25–0.63. The occupational sitting validity correlation of the OSPAQ and WSQ varied from 0.35-0.48 and 0.25-0.30, respectively, and between 0.16–0.68 for the OSPAQ for occupational standing time. The intervention-induced changes in occupational sitting and standing time were well detected by the activPAL, OSPAQ and WSQ (sitting only), but not by the ActiGraph, which had the lowest responsiveness to change.ConclusionsThis study suggests that studies aimed at determining differences in occupational sitting and standing time should use activPAL-type inclinometers as a preferred type of objective measure. Simple questionnaires showed sufficient validity and are usable in addition to an objective measure or alone when objective monitoring is not possible. The hip-worn ActiGraph was unable to distinguish between occupational sitting and standing time, when using uniaxial data and traditional cut-points for sedentary time and light-intensity activity.Trial registrationThe study was registered with the Australian New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry (No. ACTRN 12612000072819).

Highlights

  • Evidence on the detrimental health effects of prolonged sedentary behavior is accumulating

  • The aim of our study was twofold: 1) to determine the criterion validity of the ActiGraph accelerometer, Occupational Sitting and Physical Activity Questionnaire (OSPAQ) and Workforce Sitting Questionnaire (WSQ) to assess occupational sitting and standing time compared to the activPAL, and 2) to determine the responsiveness of the activPAL, ActiGraph, OSPAQ and WSQ to changes in occupational sitting and standing time following the successful introduction of a sit-stand workstation

  • The OSPAQ and WSQ showed low criterion validity for occupational sitting and standing (OSPAQ only), which is in line with what is commonly found for self-report questionnaires

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Summary

Introduction

Evidence on the detrimental health effects of prolonged sedentary behavior is accumulating. Interventions need to have a specific focus on sedentary behavior in order to generate clinically meaningful decreases in sedentary time. When evaluating such intervention, the question whether a participant improved or deteriorated their behavior is fundamental and instruments that are able to detect those changes are essential. Evidence shows that interventions need to have a specific focus on sedentary behavior in order to generate decreases in sedentary time [13]. Neuhaus et al concluded that the introduction of sit-stand workstations could reduce occupational sedentary time without compromising work performance [17]

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