Comparing national device-based physical activity surveillance systems: a systematic review

Comparing national device-based physical activity surveillance systems

Background

Physical activity surveillance systems are important for public health monitoring but rely mostly on self-report measurement of physical activity. Integration of device-based measurements in such systems can improve population estimates, however this is still relatively uncommon in existing surveillance systems. This systematic review aims to create an overview of the methodology used in existing device-based national PA surveillance systems.

Methods

Four literature databases (PubMed, Embase.com, SPORTDiscus and Web of Science) were searched, supplemented with backward tracking. Articles were included if they reported on population-based (inter)national surveillance systems measuring PA, sedentary time and/or adherence to PA guidelines. When available and in English, the methodological reports of the identified surveillance studies were also included for data extraction.

Results

This systematic literature search followed the PRISMA guidelines and yielded 34 articles and an additional 18 methodological reports, reporting on 28 studies, which in turn reported on one or multiple waves of 15 different national and 1 international surveillance system. The included studies showed substantial variation between (waves of) systems in number of participants, response rates, population representativeness and recruitment. In contrast, the methods were similar on data reduction definitions (e.g. minimal number of valid days, non-wear time and necessary wear time for a valid day).

Conclusions

The results of this review indicate that few countries use device-based PA measurement in their surveillance system. The employed methodology is diverse, which hampers comparability between countries and calls for more standardized methods as well as standardized reporting on these methods. The results from this review can help inform the integration of device-based PA measurement in (inter)national surveillance systems.

Keywords

Accelerometer; Pedometer; Physical activity; Sedentary behaviour; Surveillance.

References

Inge de Wolf, Anne Elevelt, Femke van Nassau, Vera Toepoel, Ellen de Hollander, Maaike E Kompier, Annemieke Luiten, Barry Schouten, G C Wanda Wendel-Vos, Hidde P van der Ploeg

About The Author

About The Author

Author Photo

Femke van Nassau is a senior researcher at the Amsterdam UMC, VUmc, specializing in human movement science. Her work at the Department of Public and Occupational Health and the Amsterdam Public Health Research Institute focuses on developing, implementing, and scaling up lifestyle interventions to promote physical activity and reduce sedentary behavior. With a PhD in scaling up school-based obesity prevention programs, she continues to lead innovative health promotion projects across various settings.

Latest Publications

Previous
Previous

Implementing Individually Tailored Prescription of Physical Activity in Routine Clinical Care

Next
Next

Qualitative multi-stakeholder evaluation of the school-based dietary intervention "Jump-in"