Körperliche Aktivität in der NAKO Gesundheitsstudie: erste Ergebnisse des multimodalen Erhebungskonzepts [Physical activity in the German National Cohort (NAKO): use of multiple assessment tools and initial results]
Autor/innen
- M. Leitzmann
- S. Gastell
- A. Hillreiner
- F. Herbolsheimer
- S.E. Baumeister
- B. Bohn
- M. Brandes
- H. Greiser
- L. Jaeschke
- C. Jochem
- A. Kluttig
- L. Krist
- K.B. Michels
- T. Pischon
- A. Schmermund
- O. Sprengeler
- J. Zschocke
- W. Ahrens
- H. Baurecht
- H. Becher
- K. Berger
- H. Brenner
- S. Castell
- B. Fischer
- C.W. Franzke
- J. Fricke
- W. Hoffmann
- B. Holleczek
- R. Kaaks
- S. Kalinowski
- T. Keil
- Y. Kemmling
- O. Kuß
- N. Legath
- W. Lieb
- J. Linseisen
- M. Löffler
- R. Mikolajczyk
- N. Obi
- A. Peters
- I. Ratjen
- T. Schikowski
- M.B. Schulze
- A. Stang
- S. Thierry
- H. Völzke
- K. Wirkner
- K. Steindorf
Journal
- Bundesgesundheitsblatt, Gesundheitsforschung, Gesundheitsschutz
Quellenangabe
- Bundesgesundheitsblatt Gesundheitsforschung Gesundheitsschutz 6 (3): 301-311
Zusammenfassung
BACKGROUND: Physical activity is a complex behavior that is difficult to measure validly and reliably in large, population-based studies. Data on physical activity are available for the initial 100,000 participants of the German National Cohort. OBJECTIVES: To describe the baseline physical activity assessment in the cohort and to present initial descriptive results. MATERIAL AND METHODS: Physical activity was assessed using a combination of tools, including two self-administered questionnaires, the Questionnaire on Annual Physical Activity Pattern (QUAP) and the Global Physical Activity Questionnaire (GPAQ); a computer-based 24‑h physical activity recall (cpar24); and 7‑day accelerometry (Actigraph GT3X/+; ActiGraph, Pensacola, FL, USA). RESULTS: The availability of data varied between assessment instruments (QUAP: n = 16,372; GPAQ: n = 90,900; cpar24: n = 23,989; accelerometry: n = 35,218). Analyses across measurement tools showed that on average, women spent 75 to 216 min/d, and men spent 73 to 224 min/d in moderate or higher intensity total physical activity. Persons aged 20-39 years spent 66 to 200 min/d, and persons aged 40-69 years spent 78 to 244 min/d in moderate or higher intensity total physical activity. CONCLUSIONS: Initial baseline analyses of physical activity in this cohort show the value of using a combination of questionnaires, 24‑h recalls, and a movement sensor. The comprehensive data collection represents a valuable resource for future analyses and will improve our understanding of the association between physical activity and disease prevention.