Addressing overreporting on the International Physical Activity Questionnaire (IPAQ) telephone survey with a population sample

Abstract Objective: To examine a possible problem of overreporting and to describe the degree of error with the International Physical Activity Questionnaire (IPAQ) short telephone protocol. Design: Cross-sectional study, using two different physical activity (PA) self-report protocols. Setting: Telephone interviews about PA in Belgium. Subjects: Fifty adults who had previously been interviewed with IPAQ in a national survey. Results: Seventy-five per cent reported less PA with the modified procedure than with the IPAQ. Twenty-three of the 50 individuals were found to have reported some amounts of PA with the IPAQ (either walking, or vigorous or moderate PA) when they should have reported none. In total, based on their revised reports of PA, 50% fewer persons met PA recommendations than was the case with IPAQ. The overreporting could not be related to types of error-prone individuals. Conclusions: Overreporting of PA in population samples is a serious problem that could be reduced by implementing procedure changes without changing the IPAQ items themselves.

[1]  B. Ainsworth,et al.  Moderate leisure-time physical activity: who is meeting the public health recommendations? A national cross-sectional study. , 1998, Archives of family medicine.

[2]  M. Droomers,et al.  Educational differences in leisure-time physical inactivity: a descriptive and explanatory study. , 1998, Social science & medicine.

[3]  Alan D. Lopez,et al.  The burden of disease and injury in Australia. , 2001, Bulletin of the World Health Organization.

[4]  R. Sitgreaves Psychometric theory (2nd ed.). , 1979 .

[5]  M. Booth,et al.  Assessment of Physical Activity: An International Perspective , 2000, Research quarterly for exercise and sport.

[6]  A. Manley Physical Activity And Health: A Report Of The Surgeon General , 2004 .

[7]  C. M. Harding,et al.  The social desirability of preventive health behavior. , 1984, Public health reports.

[8]  Ilse de Bourdeaudhuij,et al.  Relative contribution of psychosocial variables to the explanation of physical activity in three population-based adult samples. , 2002, Preventive medicine.

[9]  Harding Cm,et al.  The social desirability of preventive health behavior. , 1984 .

[10]  M. Kornitzer,et al.  Physical activity and physical fitness levels of Belgian males aged 40-55 years. , 1981, Cardiology.

[11]  H. Zunft,et al.  Relationship between attitudes to health, body weight and physical activity and level of physical activity in a nationally representative sample in the European Union , 1999, Public Health Nutrition.

[12]  A S Leon,et al.  A questionnaire for the assessment of leisure time physical activities. , 1978, Journal of chronic diseases.

[13]  S. K. Lo,et al.  Reliability and Validity , 2020, International Encyclopedia of Human Geography.

[14]  CAN PUBLIC HEALTH SURVEILLANCE OF PHYSICAL ACTIVITY BE STANDARDIZED INTERNATIONALLY , 1999 .

[15]  A. L. Edwards The social desirability variable in personality assessment and research , 1958 .