International Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity (Oct 2010)

Physical activity in US Blacks: a systematic review and critical examination of self-report instruments

  • Ufere Nneka,
  • Fagin Casey,
  • Wolin Kathleen Y,
  • Tuchman Hallie,
  • Bennett Gary G

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1479-5868-7-73
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 1
p. 73

Abstract

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Abstract Background Physical activity self-report instruments in the US have largely been developed for and validated in White samples. Despite calls to validate existing instruments in more diverse samples, relatively few instruments have been validated in US Blacks. Emerging evidence suggests that these instruments may have differential validity in Black populations. Purpose This report reviews and evaluates the validity and reliability of self-reported measures of physical activity in Blacks and makes recommendations for future directions. Methods A systematic literature review was conducted to identify published reports with construct or criterion validity evaluated in samples that included Blacks. Studies that reported results separately for Blacks were examined. Results The review identified 10 instruments validated in nine manuscripts. Criterion validity correlations tended to be low to moderate. No study has compared the validity of multiple instruments in a single sample of Blacks. Conclusion There is a need for efforts validating self-report physical activity instruments in Blacks, particularly those evaluating the relative validity of instruments in a single sample.