| Literature DB >> 21798015 |
Catrine Tudor-Locke1, Cora L Craig, Wendy J Brown, Stacy A Clemes, Katrien De Cocker, Billie Giles-Corti, Yoshiro Hatano, Shigeru Inoue, Sandra M Matsudo, Nanette Mutrie, Jean-Michel Oppert, David A Rowe, Michael D Schmidt, Grant M Schofield, John C Spence, Pedro J Teixeira, Mark A Tully, Steven N Blair.
Abstract
Physical activity guidelines from around the world are typically expressed in terms of frequency, duration, and intensity parameters. Objective monitoring using pedometers and accelerometers offers a new opportunity to measure and communicate physical activity in terms of steps/day. Various step-based versions or translations of physical activity guidelines are emerging, reflecting public interest in such guidance. However, there appears to be a wide discrepancy in the exact values that are being communicated. It makes sense that step-based recommendations should be harmonious with existing evidence-based public health guidelines that recognize that "some physical activity is better than none" while maintaining a focus on time spent in moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA). Thus, the purpose of this review was to update our existing knowledge of "How many steps/day are enough?", and to inform step-based recommendations consistent with current physical activity guidelines. Normative data indicate that healthy adults typically take between 4,000 and 18,000 steps/day, and that 10,000 steps/day is reasonable for this population, although there are notable "low active populations." Interventions demonstrate incremental increases on the order of 2,000-2,500 steps/day. The results of seven different controlled studies demonstrate that there is a strong relationship between cadence and intensity. Further, despite some inter-individual variation, 100 steps/minute represents a reasonable floor value indicative of moderate intensity walking. Multiplying this cadence by 30 minutes (i.e., typical of a daily recommendation) produces a minimum of 3,000 steps that is best used as a heuristic (i.e., guiding) value, but these steps must be taken over and above habitual activity levels to be a true expression of free-living steps/day that also includes recommendations for minimal amounts of time in MVPA. Computed steps/day translations of time in MVPA that also include estimates of habitual activity levels equate to 7,100 to 11,000 steps/day. A direct estimate of minimal amounts of MVPA accumulated in the course of objectively monitored free-living behaviour is 7,000-8,000 steps/day. A scale that spans a wide range of incremental increases in steps/day and is congruent with public health recognition that "some physical activity is better than none," yet still incorporates step-based translations of recommended amounts of time in MVPA may be useful in research and practice. The full range of users (researchers to practitioners to the general public) of objective monitoring instruments that provide step-based outputs require good reference data and evidence-based recommendations to be able to design effective health messages congruent with public health physical activity guidelines, guide behaviour change, and ultimately measure, track, and interpret steps/day.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21798015 PMCID: PMC3197470 DOI: 10.1186/1479-5868-8-79
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Behav Nutr Phys Act ISSN: 1479-5868 Impact factor: 6.457
Government/agency/professional organization step-based recommendations from around the world
| Government/ | Step-based recommendation |
|---|---|
| Queensland Health (Australia) | Sponsors 10,000 Steps: "aims to increase the day-to-day activity of Australians by encouraging you to use a step-counting pedometer to accumulate 'incidental' physical activity as part of your everyday living" ( |
| National Heart Association of Australia | Produced a brochure in 2009 "Making every step count" ISBN 978-1-921226-71-7, |
| U.S. President's Challenge Physical Activity and Fitness Awards Program | Recommends 8,500 steps/day for adults, and 13,000 and 11,000 steps/day for boys and girls respectively |
| America on the Move | Promotes walking an extra 2,000 steps in addition to eating 100 less calories each day to stop weight gain( |
| National Obesity Forum (U.K) | Indicates that 3,000 to 6,000 steps/day is sedentary, 7,000 to 10,000 steps is moderately active, and > 11,000 steps/day is very active. ( |
| Northern Ireland's Public Health Agency | Promotes an additional 30 minutes of daily walking or 3000 steps ( |
| Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare of Japan [ | Recommends: "for individuals who intend to promote health mainly through physical activity, a daily walk of 8,000 to 10,000 steps is set as the target. The report indicates that 8,000 to 10,000 steps/day is approximately equivalent to 60 minutes of walking per day at an intensity of 3 METs, and that it is also approximately equivalent to 23 MET-hours/week of MVPA which is the recommended physical activity level in this guideline. |
Studies of free-living behaviour reporting percent of participants meeting select step-defined cut points in adults
| First Author | Sample Characteristics | Instrument | Monitoring Frame | Steps/day cut points used | % Meeting |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tudor-Locke [ | 76 men, 133 women; population-based survey of Sumter County, South Carolina; 18+ years of age | Yamax SW-200, Yamax Corporation, Tokyo, Japan | 7 days | 5,000 | 44% < 5,000 |
| Miller [ | 74 men, 111 women; | Yamax SW 700 | 7 days | 10,000 | Men: 24.4% |
| Behrens [ | 18 men, 18 women; | Digi-walker (Model DW-200, Yamax, Tokyo, Japan) | 7 days | 10,000 | 80% |
| Wyatt [ | 344 men, 386 women; 18+ years of age; Colorado statewide representative sample | Yamax SW-200, Yamasa Corporation, Tokyo, Japan | 4 days | Adult Graduated Step Index | 33% < 5,000 |
| Behrens [ | 204 men, 237 women; | Actigraph 7164, Manufacturing Technology Incorporated, Fort Walton Beach, FL | 7 days | 10,000 | Overall: 67.35% |
| Hornbuckle [ | 69 women; self-identified African American volunteers; 40-62 years of age | New Lifestyles Digi-Walker SW-200, New Lifestyles, Inc., Lees Summit MO | 7 days | Adult Graduated Step Index | 38% < 5,000 |
| Bennett [ | 153 men, 280 women; | Yamax SW200 | 5 days | sedentary index: 5,000; | 56% < 5,000 |
| McCormack [ | 205 men, 223 women; | Yamax Digi-walker SW-700 | 7 days | 10,000 | Men: 50.2% |
| De Cocker [ | 598 men, 624 women; random sample from public record office; 25 to 75 years | Yamax Digiwalker SW-200 (Yamax, Tokyo, Japan) | 7 days | Adult Graduated Step Index | 12.9% < 5000 |
| De Cocker [ | 146 men, 164 women; | Yamax Digiwalker SW-200, (Yamax, Tokyo, Japan) | 7 days | 7,500 | ≥7,500: 80.6% |
| Mitsui [ | 62 men,117 women; | EM-180, YAMASA, Tokyo, Japan | 7 days | Adult Graduated Step Index | Men |
| Payn [ | 25 men, 60 women; | Yamax Digi Walker SW-200, Yamax USA, Inc., San Antonio, TX | 7 days | Adult Graduated Step Index | 29.4% ≤ 5000 |
| McKercher [ | 766 men, 869 women; | Yamax Digiwalker SW-200 | 7 days | Adult Graduated Step Index | Men |
| Schmidt [ | 887 men, 906 women; 26 to 36 years | Yamax SW-200 | 7 days | Adult Graduated Step Index | Men |
| Tudor-Locke [ | 1781 men, 1963 women; | ActiGraph AM-7164; censored data to approximate pedometer outputs | 7 days | Adult Graduated Step Index with additional sedentary categories | Men |
| Clemes [ | 44 men | SW-200 pedometer (New Lifestyles, Inc., Lees Summit, MO) | 4 weeks in summer and again in winter | 10,000 steps/day | Normal weight |
Adult Graduated Step Index [11]: 1) < 5,000 steps/day ('sedentary'); 2) 5,000-7,499 steps/day ('low active'); 3) 7,500-9,999 steps/day ('somewhat active'); 4) ≥10,000-12,499 steps/day ('active'); and 5) ≥12,500 steps/day ('highly active'). These categories were reinforced in an updated review in 2008 [12] and in 2009 the original 'sedentary' level was segmented into two additional levels: < 2,500 steps/day ('basal activity') and 2,500 to 4,999 steps/day ('limited activity') [3].
Controlled study designs that have informed "how many steps/day are enough?" in adults
| Reference | Sample Characteristics | Step Counting Instrumentation | Protocol | Analysis strategy | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Welk [ | 17 males, 14 females | Yamax Digi-Walker (Yamax Inc., Tokyo, Japan), | walk/jog a track and/or treadmill mile at 4, 6, and 7.5 miles/hr (6.4, 9.66, and 12.8 km/hr*) | steps taken for each pace | 3,800-4,000 steps would approximate 30 minutes of moderate intensity walking |
| Tudor-Locke [ | 25 males, 25 females | Yamax SW-200, Yamax Corp., Tokyo, | 6-minute treadmill bouts at 4.8, 6.4, and 9.7 km/hr | V02 from expired gases | 3,000-4,000 steps in 30 minutes of moderate intensity walking based on a threshold cadence of 100 steps/min |
| Marshall [ | 39 males, 58 females | Yamax SW-200, | 6-minute treadmill bouts at 2.4, 3.0,3.5, 4.1 miles/hr (3.86, 4.83, 5.64, and 8.04 km/hr*) | V02 from expired gases; METs predicted from steps/minute | Inter-individual variation apparent however, minimally 3,000 steps in 30 minutes of moderate intensity walking based on a threshold cadence of 100 steps/min |
| MacPherson [ | 12 males, 15 females | Observed tally | 10,000 steps on treadmill at 3.2 and 6.4 km/hour | time to complete and PAEE kcal from Tritrac-R3D accelerometer | most participants could achieve at least 150 kcal in energy expenditure with 10,000 steps at the slow walk (median 255 kcal, range 148-401). Faster walking produced a higher energy expenditure (median 388 kcal, range 294-901). |
| Beets [ | 9 males, 11 females; healthy adults; | Observed tally | 6-minute hallway bouts at 1.8, 2.7, 3.6, 4.5, and 5.4 km/hr* | Random effects models to predict steps/min from METs and anthropometric measures | Inter-individual variation apparent however, minimally 3,000 steps in 30 minutes of moderate intensity walking based on a threshold cadence of 100 steps/min |
| Rowe [ | 37 males, 38 females; university students, employees, and their families; 32.9 ± 12.4 years | Observed tally | 6-minute treadmill bouts at randomly assigned sets of slow (mean 4.3 km/hr), medium (5.0 km/hr), fast (5.8 km/hr) speeds | Mixed model regression analysis to predict METs from cadence, anthropometric measures, stride length | Inter-individual variation apparent however, minimally 3,000 steps in 30 minutes of moderate intensity walking based on a threshold cadence of 100 steps/min |
| Abel [ | 9 males, 10 females; | Observed tally | 10-minute treadmill bouts at walking (3.24, 4.8, and 6.42 km/hr*) and running speeds (8.04, 9.66, 11.28 km/hr*) | Linear and non-linear regression analysis to predict METs from cadence | Inter-individual variation apparent however, 100 steps/minute a reasonable estimate of moderate intensity walking |
*reported speeds converted to km/hr.
Speed, MET levels, and cadence from track, treadmill, and hallway walking/running studies of adults
| Reference | Speed (miles/hr) | Speed (km/hr) | MET | Cadence (spm) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Beets [ | 1.12A | 1.8A | 2.0B | 64C |
| Beets [ | 1.68A | 2.70A | 2.4B | 81C |
| MacPherson [ | 1.99D | 3.2 | 2E | 93 |
| Abel [ | 2.01F | 3.24F | 3.1B | 96C |
| Beets [ | 2.24A | 3.6A | 2.7B | 96C |
| Marshall [ | 2.4 | 3.86G | 3.09H | 109I |
| Rowe [ | 2.7 | 4.3 | 2.94J | 102 |
| Beets [ | 2.8A | 4.50A | 3.2B | 106C |
| Abel [ | 2.98F | 4.80F | 4.0B | 114C |
| Tudor-Locke [ | 2.98D | 4.8 | 3.60 | 108C |
| Marshall [ | 3 | 4.83G | 3.73H | 115I |
| Rowe [ | 3.1 | 5.0 | 3.46J | 114 |
| Beets [ | 3.36A | 5.40A | 3.9B | 115C |
| Marshall [ | 3.5 | 5.64G | 4.94H | 124I |
| Rowe [ | 3.6 | 5.8 | 4.2J | 125 |
| Abel [ | 3.99F | 6.42F | 5.5B | 127C |
| Tudor-Locke [ | 3.98D | 6.4 | 5.25 | 127C |
| Welk [ | 4 | 6.44 | 5.25K | 129L |
| MacPherson [ | 3.98D | 6.4 | 5.25K | 129 |
| Marshall [ | 4.1 | 6.60G | 6.85H | 134I |
| Abel [ | 5.0F | 8.04F | 9.18B | 158C |
| Abel [ | 6.0F | 9.66F | 10.93B | 165C |
| Welk [ | 6 | 9.66 | 10M | 163N |
| Tudor-Locke [ | 6.02D | 9.7 | 10.00 | 161C |
| Abel [ | 7.01F | 11.28F | 12.98B | 170C |
| Welk [ | 7.5 | 12.08 | 12.5O | 165P |
* Jogging/running
Note: Superscripts denote values derived from information contained in original manuscript
A Converted from reported meters/second
B METs determined by weighted average METs reported for males and females
C Cadence determined by weighted average spm reported for males and females
D Converted from reported km/hr
E Compendium code 1179: walking on job, less than 2.0 mph (in office or lab area), very slow
FConverted from reported meters/minute
G Converted from reported miles/hr
H METs determined by weighted average METs for normal weight, overweight, obese
I Cadence determined by weighted average hand-counted spm for normal weight, overweight, obese
J Converted from reported VO2
KMET assumed to be the same as that for 6.4 km/hr pace in Tudor-Locke et al. [38]
LCadence determined by dividing weighted mean steps for men and women (1936) by time taken to complete a mile (15 min)
MCompendium code 12050: running, 6 mph (10 minute mile)
NCadence determined by dividing weighted mean steps for men and women (1631) by time taken to complete a mile (10 min)
OCompendium code 12080: running, 7.5 mph (8 minute mile)
PCadence determined by dividing weighted mean steps for men and women (1317) by time taken to complete a mile (8 min)
Studies that have attempted to set steps/day cut points in adults relative to time spent in MVPA or energy expended
| First Author | Sample Characteristics | Instrument | Monitoring Frame | Analytical Strategy | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tudor-Locke [ | 27 men, 25 women | Yamax SW-200, Yamax Corporation, Tokyo, Japan; | 7 days | Mean steps/day associated with the step/day quartile distribution in which participants accumulated an average of 30 min/day accelerometer-determined MVPA | 8,000 steps/day corresponded with accumulating 30 minutes of MVPA |
| Miller [ | 74 men, 111 women | Yamax SW 700; | 7 days | Steps/day equivalent to 150+ minutes/week self-reported MVPA | Those who met guidelines averaged 9,547 ± 2,655 steps/day |
| Behrens [ | 18 men, 18 women | Digi-walker (Model DW-200, Yamax, Tokyo, Japan) | 7 days | Steps/day related to 30+ minutes of accelerometer-determined moderate physical activity | 11,822 steps/day |
| Jordan [ | 111 postmenopausal women | Accusplit Eagle 120 (AE 120) | 7 days | Steps/day associated with attaining prescribed and verified exercise equivalent to 120-150 min/week or 8kcal/kg/week EE | 3-4 days of 10,000 steps/day met energy expenditure guidelines for the week |
| Macfarlane [ | 30 men, 19 women | SW-700, Yamax Corporation., Tokyo, Japan | 7 days | Selected 25th percentile of steps/day distribution; examined sensitivity/specificity of achieving 30 minutes MVPA measured by various instruments | 8,000 steps/day |
| Tudor-Locke [ | 1781 men, 1963 women; | ActiGraph AM-7164; censored data to approximate pedometer outputs | 7 days | Step-defined activity category where at least 30 minutes of MVPA was accumulated | Men who took 7,500-9,999 steps/day accumulated 38 minutes MVPA; women who achieved 10,000-12,499 steps/day accumulated 36 minutes of MVPA (women who achieved 7,500-9,999 steps/day accumulated 25 minutes of MVPA |
Figure 1Steps/day scale schematic linked to time spent in MVPA.