Key points are not available for this paper at this time.
PURPOSE: The Trial for Activity in Adolescent Girls (TAAG) is a multi-center group-randomized trial to reduce the usual decline in moderate to vigorous physical activity (MVPA) among middle-school girls. In group-randomized trials, the group-level intraclass correlation (ICC) has a strong inverse relationship to power and a good estimate of ICC is needed to determine sample size. As a result, we conducted a substudy to estimate the school-level ICC for intensity-weighted minutes of MVPA measured using an accelerometer. METHODS: To estimate the ICC, each of six sites recruited two schools and randomly selected 45 eighth grade girls from each school; 80.7% participated. Each girl wore an Actigraph accelerometer for 7 d. Readings above 1500 counts per half minute were counted as MVPA. These counts were converted into metabolic equivalents (MET) and summed over 6 a.m. to midnight to provide MET-minutes per 18-h day of MVPA. Minutes of MVPA per 18-h day also were calculated ignoring the MET value. RESULTS: The unadjusted school-level ICC for minutes of MVPA was 0.0205 (95%CI: -0.0079, 0.1727) and for MET-minutes of MVPA was 0.0045 (95% CI: -0.0147, 0.1145). Adjustment for age and BMI had no measurable effect, whereas adjustment for ethnicity reduced both ICC; adjusted values were 0.0175 (95% CI: -0.0092, 0.1622) for minutes of MVPA and 0.0000 (95% CI: -0.0166, 0.0968) for MET-minutes of MVPA. This information was used to calculate the number of schools and girls needed for TAAG to have 90% power to detect a 50% reduction in the decline of MET-minutes of MVPA between sixth and eighth grade. CONCLUSIONS: The results called for 36 schools in TAAG, with 120 girls invited for measurements at each school, and a minimum participation rate of 80%.
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
David M. Murray
National Institutes of Health
Diane Catellier
General / Preventive / Lipids
Peter J. Hannan
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise
Johns Hopkins University
University of Minnesota
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Murray et al. (Sat,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a1d1c40ba65f5ee325dd03e — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1249/01.mss.0000126806.72453.1c