Literature DB >> 11055276

A comparison of primary and proxy respondent reports of habitual physical activity, using kappa statistics and log-linear models.

P Graham1, R Jackson.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Many epidemiological studies rely in part on proxy informants. There is little published information on the reliability of proxy-respondent reports of physical activity.
METHODS: Self-reported data on vigorous and moderate physical activity, from a representative sub-sample of participants in a community-based case-control study of coronary heart disease, were compared with information collected from their next-of-kin.
RESULTS: Relative to primary respondents, proxy respondents under-reported activity by approximately 10 percentage points, for both leisure and work-time activity. On a simple three point scale (inactivity/moderate activity/physical activity), 70% of primary-proxy pairs were in exact agreement with regard to leisure time activity and 67% of pairs were in exact agreement on work-time activity. The corresponding values for the weighted kappa statistic were 0.66 [95% confidence interval (CI) 0.59-0.72] and 0.62 (0.54-0.72). Log-linear modelling provided evidence for superior agreement on worktime activity when the proxy was not the primary respondent's spouse. DISCUSSION: Overall levels of primary-proxy respondent agreement on physical activity seem somewhat lower than has been reported for smoking and alcohol-drinking frequency. There seems little reason to prefer spouse proxies when endeavouring to elicit information on work-time physical activity. Log-linear modelling provides an efficient means of exploring covariate effects in observer-agreement studies.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2000        PMID: 11055276

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Epidemiol Biostat        ISSN: 1359-5229


  2 in total

1.  Testing measurement reliability in older populations: methods for informed discrimination in instrument selection and application.

Authors:  Peter H Van Ness; Virginia R Towle; Manisha Juthani-Mehta
Journal:  J Aging Health       Date:  2007-12-18

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Authors:  Patrick T Bradshaw; Joseph G Ibrahim; Nikhil Khankari; Rebecca J Cleveland; Page E Abrahamson; June Stevens; Jessie A Satia; Susan L Teitelbaum; Alfred I Neugut; Marilie D Gammon
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  2 in total

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