![]() |
JOURNAL TOOLS |
Publishing options |
eTOC |
To subscribe |
Submit an article |
Recommend to your librarian |
ARTICLE TOOLS |
Reprints |
Permissions |
Share |


YOUR ACCOUNT
YOUR ORDERS
SHOPPING BASKET
Items: 0
Total amount: € 0,00
HOW TO ORDER
YOUR SUBSCRIPTIONS
YOUR ARTICLES
YOUR EBOOKS
COUPON
ACCESSIBILITY
Original articles EPIDEMIOLOGY AND CLINICAL MEDICINE
The Journal of Sports Medicine and Physical Fitness 2004 June;44(2):186-92
Copyright © 2009 EDIZIONI MINERVA MEDICA
language: English
Stability and convergent validity of the Physical Activity Scale for the Elderly (PASE)
Dinger M. K. 1, Oman R. F. 2, Taylor E. L. 1, Vesely S. K. 3, Able J. 1
1 Department of Health and Sport Sciences University of Oklahoma Norman, OK, USA 2 Department of Health Promotion Sciences University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center Norman, OK, USA 3 Department of Biostatistics and Epidemiology University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center Norman, OK, USA
Aim. The purpose of this study was to assess the stability and convergent validity of the Physical Activity Scale for the Elderly (PASE) among rural, community dwelling elderly persons using Computer Science and Applications, Inc. Actigraph Monitors (Actigraph) as the direct criterion measure.
Methods. Experimental design: a correlational design was employed. Setting: rural community in the United States. Participants: 56 subjects (age=75.7±7.9 years) who were living independently and volunteered to participate in the study. Measures: subjects wore an Actigraph monitor during all waking hours for 7 consecutive days. At the conclusion of the 7 days, each subject met with a trained interviewer to complete the PASE questionnaire. Three days later the subjects met with the same interviewer to complete the PASE a 2nd time recalling their physical activity for the same 7-day period.
Results. Actigraph data indicated that subjects averaged 168.1±76.3 counts·minute-1 during the 7-day period. A high intraclass correlation coefficient (r=0.91) was calculated between the 1st interview total PASE score (115.97±59.91) and the 2nd interview total PASE score (115.71±50.97). In addition, there was a statistically significant Spearman correlation coefficient of 0.43 (p<0.01) between Actigraph mean counts·minute-1 and 1st interview total PASE scores.
Conclusion. In this rural elderly sample, the PASE was a stable instrument with validity indices similar to those previously reported in younger, more active, populations.