A comparison of direct versus self-report measures for assessing physical activity in adults: a systematic review
University of Ottawa · Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario · +2 more institutions
Abstract
Accurate assessment is required to assess current and changing physical activity levels, and to evaluate the effectiveness of interventions designed to increase activity levels. This study systematically reviewed the literature to determine the extent of agreement between subjectively (self-report e.g. questionnaire, diary) and objectively (directly measured; e.g. accelerometry, doubly labeled water) assessed physical activity in adults.
Eight electronic databases were searched to identify observational and experimental studies of adult populations. Searching identified 4,463 potential articles. Initial screening found that 293 examined the relationship between self-reported and directly measured physical activity and met the eligibility criteria. Data abstraction was completed for 187 articles, which described comparable data and/or comparisons, while 76 articles lacked comparable data or comparisons, and a further 30 did not meet the review's eligibility requirements. A risk of bias assessment was conducted for all articles from which data was abstracted.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 19.37
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 194
Authors
6Topics & keywords
- Physical activity
- Observational study
- Self-report study
- Medicine
- Psychological intervention
- Clinical nutrition
- Psychology
- Physical therapy