posted on 2013-01-01, 00:00authored byT O'Connor, Ester Cerin, J Robles, R Lee, J Kerr, N Butte, J Mendoza, D Thompson, T Baranowski
Abstract. Both physical and social environmental factors influence young children’s physical activity, yet little is known about where Hispanic children are more likely to be active. We assessed the feasibility of simultaneously measuring, then processing objective measures of location and physical activity among Hispanic preschool children. Preschool-aged Hispanic children (n = 15) simultaneously wore QStarz BT100X global positioning system (GPS) data loggers and Actigraph GT3X accelerometers for a 24- to 36-hour period, during which time their parents completed a location and travel diary. Data were aggregated to the minute and processed using the personal activity location measurement system (PALMS). Children successfully wore the GPS data loggers and accelerometers simultaneously, 12 of which yielded data that met quality standards. The average percent correspondence between GPS- and diary-based estimates of types of location was high and Kappa statistics were moderate to excellent, ranging from 0.49-0.99. The between method (GPS monitor, parent-reported diary) correlations of estimated participant-aggregated minutes spent on vehicle-based trips were strong. The simultaneous use of GPS and accelerometers to assess Hispanic preschool children’s location and physical activity is feasible. This methodology has the potential to provide more precise findings to inform environmental interventions and policy changes to promote physical activity among Hispanic preschool children.
History
Journal
Geospatial health
Volume
7
Pagination
375 - 380
Location
Naples, Italy
Open access
Yes
ISSN
1827-1987
eISSN
1970-7096
Language
eng
Publication classification
C3.1 Non-refereed articles in a professional journal
Copyright notice
2013, Universita degli studi di napoli ""Federico II""