The aim of the present study was to assess the reproducibility and validity of the QAPACE questionnaire in a random sample of children attending school in the city of Bogotá, as a preliminary step for a large-scale study aiming to evaluate PA in the corresponding population. The 30 min average time needed to fill the questionnaire doesn’t exceed the mental concentration capacity of youngsters and has showed a high reproducibility, although the youngest subjects used more time completing the questionnaire. Generally, children are unable to estimate accurately the duration of an activity. For them, intensity and enjoyment are directly tied to the duration of any activity. To make things easier for the subjects, especially for the youngest ones, different specific periods of time (15 min, 30 min, 45 min, 60+ min) were offered, so as to improve the accuracy while completing the questionnaire [Montoye, 1996). The questionnaire was designed to measure the mean DEE over the past year, during school and vacation, 24 hours a day. We believe that the repeated previous comprehension tests, the presence of a supervisor, the limited size of the group with the possibility of answering to their questions could explain the high reproducibility. The delay of 6 weeks between the two test-retest sessions could have been too short to detect changes in activities. The six weeks detainment between the test-retest was reported to represent the minimal time for a subject to forget the previous responses (McDowell, 1987). The delays in the studies reported in the literature can be 10 days (Vuillemin et al., 2000), 15 days (Booth et al., 2001), one month (Aaron et al., 1993), 3 months (Aaron et al., 1995; Berthouze et al., 1993), 6 months (Pols et al., 1997) or one year (Aaron et al., 1995). It has been reported that surveys focusing on a one year time frame are more likely to reflect usual activity patterns than those recording activities over a few days or over the past week (Kriska and Caspersen, 1997). The ICC was lower, in the youngest and oldest groups, which could correspond to ages with less concentration or unstable behavior. The ICC were higher in children from higher socio-economic status and for the categories corresponding to a personal choice like artistic activities, sport competition and vacation whereas they were lower for home activities or transportation, corresponding to mandatory or uncomfortable activities. Few studies have examined the reproducibility and validity of a questionnaire in children on the yearly PA using a self-administered but supervised modality. Thus, direct comparisons with other studies differing in test instrument, population and time frame should remain cautious. Nevertheless, the reproducibility coefficients were comparable to the ones reported with respect to the different test-retest time intervals. The studies in children show ICC between 0.66 and 0.98 with time intervals between 6 days and 1 year (Aaron et al., 1995; Baecke et al., 1982; Berthouze et al., 1993; Bouchard et al., 1983; Garcia et al., 1997; Kowalski et al., 1997; Pols et al., 1997; Sallis et al., 1993, Taylor et al., 1978; Weston et al., 1997). In adults, the following ICCs were reported as: 0.91 (6-10 days) (Bouchard et al., 1983), 0.89 (1 month) and 0.69 (1 year) (Taylor et al., 1978), 0.89 (1 month) and 0.79 (11 months) (Baecke et al., 1982), 0.997 (7 days) (Berthouze et al., 1993), 0.83 (95% C.I. 0.66- 0.99) (10 days) (Vuillemin et al., 2000). In a self-administered survey using 1 day PA recall questionnaire concerning 90 American teenagers from 7th to 8th grades (mean age 14 years), the ICC was in the range 0.98 to 0.99 using the heart rate method, Caltrac and pedometer measurements of 0.43, 0.77 and 0.88 (Weston et al., 1997). When the CAINM questionnaire was applied to a Spanish speaking population of school children from Mexico City (Hernandez et al., 2000), both the children and their mothers were tested six months apart on the children activities and the results were compared. The correlation coefficients, adjusted on age, gender and socio-economic level, ranged between 0.09 and 0.55. This study dealt mainly with low socio-economic population. The capacity of extrapolating the results of the reproducibility study to a large survey relies on the modalities of selection of the sample of schoolchildren. In the Validity study a significant correlation between the estimated global DEE and both the indirect peak VO2 measurement (Leger test) and the direct peak VO2 measurement were found. The lower ICC observed in girls could be explained either by a different body composition between girls and boys with a higher fat mass in the former and a higher lean mass in the latter. This difference in mass conveys that the subjects with higher lean mass present a greater capacity for effort expressed in peak VO2 and strength, and a lower motivation for physical activity in teenage girls (Aaron et al., 1993, Cooper, 1996). The measurements of peak VO2 were lower in girls, by 23% in direct measurements and 17% in indirect measurements, all differences previously reported in the literature (Flandrois et al., 1982; MacMurray et al., 1998; Turley et al., 1997). The global intra-class correlation coefficients (ICC) for the global measurements of PA showed a high ICC r = 0.96 (95% CI 0.95-0.97). The few studies which have been published addressing, specifically the validity of a self-administered but supervised questionnaire, aimed to estimate a mean PA index in children over the past year; therefore, direct comparisons with other studies differing in test instruments, the population studied, the time frame and the geographical location should remain cautious. However, the ICC reported here appears comparable to the ICC of the Bouchard three day- questionnaire with PWC 150 or PWC 50/kg of respectively 0.70 and 0.27 (Bouchard et al., 1983) for a recalled period covering the last six to ten days; They are also comparable to the values of the ICC reported in other studies: 0.47 - 0.82 in a seven day recall questionnaire with the heart rate as the biological measurement (Sallis et al., 1993); 0.40 in children 4- 8 years, with the Estonian Questionnaire of the parents and their children and the heart rate (Harro, 1997); 0.38 for 7-9 years gymnasts; 0.42 for recreational in prepubertal girls with a 7 day- delay questionnaire and the Caltrac accelerometer in Scerpella et al., 2002. Also for a seven day recall questionnaire adapted to children with max VO2 as the biological measurement in Schmucker (Schmucker et al., 1985) the ICC was 0.67; 0.40 for boys and 0.23 for girls using a seven day recall questionnaire adapted to children and submaximal VO2 in cycle ergometer as the biological measurement in Suter (1993). The correlations between the direct and indirect measurements of peak VO2 were similar to the values reported by McNaughton. (r = 0.87) (McNaughton et al., 1996) or Van Mechelen (r = 0.76) (Van Mechelen et al., 1986). |