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. 2015 Apr 17;15:391. doi: 10.1186/s12889-015-1731-4

Tracking physical activity in different settings from late childhood to early adulthood in Germany: the MoMo longitudinal study

Annette Rauner 1,, Darko Jekauc 2, Filip Mess 3, Steffen Schmidt 1, Alexander Woll 1
PMCID: PMC4407713  PMID: 25887314

Abstract

Background

Regular physical activity is important for remaining healthy. Most studies on the association between active child- and adulthood were based on small non-representative populations. The purpose of the study was to quantify tracking of leisure-time PA (in and outside sports clubs) for 6 years from adolescence into young adulthood in a representative sample in Germany.

Methods

This study was a subsample of the “Motorik-Modul (MoMo) Longitudinal Study” (baseline: 2003–2006, wave 1: 2009–2012). Representative longitudinal physical activity data of N = 947 adolescents were included and collected using the MoMo-physical activity questionnaire (MoMo-PAQ). Stability of different physical activity indices was measured using Spearman’s rank-order correlations and ANOVA with repeated measurement with age, sex and socio-economic status (SES) as determinants.

Results

While mean leisure-time physical activity outside sports clubs (LTPA) (F1,397 = 7.9, df = 1; p < .01), sports club physical activity (SCPA) (F387 = 4.8, df = 1; p < .05) and overall physical activity (OPA) (F1,441 = 7.7, df = 1; p < .01) changed significantly over time, no changes in overall sports index (OS index) (F371 = 3.2, df = 1; p > .05) were observed. Low tracking correlations were found for different physical activity indices (LTPA: r = .094, p < .05; SCPA: r = .248 p = <.05; OPA: r = .211 p < .05; OS index: r = .266 p < .05). Results by sex, age and SES were inconsistent. Analyses of agreement showed different results for determinants and settings.

Conclusion

The results of this representative study were comparable to previous studies and showed significant but low stability. Possible reasons for low stability coefficients are a relatively long timespan between both measurement points and potential effects of the reliability of subjective assessment methods. The results confirm that physical activity is a fluctuating variable. Future studies should examine the determinants of tracking and change in physical activity.

Keywords: Physical activity, MoMo, Tracking, Adolescents, Youth, Settings

Background

Although the health benefits of physical activity are well documented [1], these benefits require continuous and regular participation in physical activities. A physically active lifestyle during childhood and adolescence presumably carries over into adulthood [2] implying that physical activity interventions during childhood and adolescence would be an appropriate strategy for improving physical activity levels during adulthood. Moreover, an active lifestyle during childhood and adolescence is an important factor in preventing diseases in adulthood [3-5]. Especially because obesity, physically inactive lifestyle and poor cardiorespiratory fitness in childhood may increase the risk of health problems later in life as stated by Pahkala et al. [6], an active lifestyle should start early in life [2]. Therefore, it is important to understand these carry-over or ‘tracking’ effects of physical activity from childhood through adulthood.

Twisk et al. [7] have defined the term ‘tracking’ as the stability of a certain variable over time or the predictability of a measurement early in life for the value of the same variable later in life. Usually, tracking is expressed by test-retest-correlations representing normative stability. Normative stability will be high when individuals remain at the same relative position within the sample distribution. Mean-stability (means) and homogeneity of variances provide additional information for interpreting test-retest-correlations. Telama et al. [8] revealed in their review that the tracking of physical activity is mostly low (males: r = .15 to .44; females: r = .09 to .34) from young age to adulthood where some studies showed no significant correlations. Subsequently, five studies [9-13] from Estonia, USA, Finland, Brazil, Australia, Belgium, Scotland and the Netherlands used intervals between measurements from 3 to 21 years to analyse mostly the normative and mean stability. The results of these studies were inconsistent with a tendency to low tracking correlations. Studies published after 2009 showed weak correlation coefficients for normative stability for overall populations (overall: r = −.08 to .35) [11,12,13] with slightly higher correlation coefficients for girls (r = −.07 to .39) than for boys (r = .05 to .31) [9-12]. In addition, (in)active adolescents had higher odds ratios for growing into (in)active young adults [9,12,13]. Most previous studies used questionnaires to assess total physical activity and did not distinguish between type, frequency, intensity and setting of physical activity. Some studies [11,14] used also objective measures to assess frequency, intensity or steps of physical activity. However, a comparison between studies using objective and subjective measurement methods is difficult because of different reliability. Moreover, comparisons between studies are difficult because of the large variability in study population size, intervals between measurements and lumped analyses of physical activity. Hence, to date the tracking of specific aspects of physical activity especially in representative samples in European countries is largely unknown.

Therefore, the purpose of the study was to quantify tracking of leisure-time physical activity (in and outside sports clubs) for 6 years from adolescence into young adulthood in Germany.

Methods

Study design and participants

KiGGS is a longitudinal and for German children and adolescents nationally representative study [15] conducted by the Robert Koch-institute in Berlin and approved by the Federal Office for Data Protection and by the ethics committee of the Charité University Hospital. In this study, nationwide representative data on health status of children and adolescents are collected and the development of health issues, health behaviour and health risks are monitored in a core survey and several modules [16]. The “Motorik-Modul” (MoMo) Longitudinal Study is one of these modules [15,17] and aims to analyse the development of physical fitness and physical activity, and the impact of physical fitness and physical activity on mental and physical health [18]. The MoMo Longitudinal Study was approved by the ethics committee of University of Konstanz and has been performed according to the Declaration of Helsinki. The MoMo participants were recruited from the KiGGS sample. The sampling procedure was based on a three-step process developed in cooperation with the Centre for Survey Research and Methodology (ZUMA, Mannheim, Germany) [15]. Based on an appropriate computation, first the study sample points (N = 167) were determined. At the second stage, an age-stratified sample of randomly selected children and adolescents was drawn from local population registries for the “KiGGS Study” with a total of 28,400 participants aged 0 to 17 years [15,19]. From these 28,400 participants, 17,641 youths took part in the “KiGGS Study” (response rate: 62.1%) [20]. In a third stage, the Robert Koch-institute has drawn the representative subsample aged between 4 and 17 years, (N = 7,866) for the MoMo Study in consultation with ZUMA [17]. 4,529 participants took part in the MoMo Study (response rate: 57.6%). To ensure the representativeness, weighting procedures were used [20].

In this study, we used a subsample of the MoMo Longitudinal Study. Prior to study participation, each parent and participant gave informed written consent. From 2003 to 2006, data of 4,529 children and adolescents aged between 4 and 17 years were collected in a nationwide representative sample (study baseline, t0). From 2009 to 2012, the first survey wave (t1) was conducted. Overall, cross-sectional data of 4,529 and longitudinal data of 2,842 children, adolescents and young adults, aged between 4 to 23 years were surveyed in the first wave. Data collection was conducted year-round without any interruptions over a longer period. Because the participants gave information in which months they participated in sports, the impact of seasonality could be excluded from the indices. In addition, the order of data collection on the 167 sample points and the time of year (season) were similar at wave 1 and baseline. Hence, an impact of seasonality can be precluded [21].

Detailed information on the study design has been previously published [18]. In this study, only longitudinal data for participants aged 11 to 17 years at baseline were included in the analysis (Noverall = 947; Nboys = 447; Ngirls = 500). MoMo longitudinal data are available upon request (alexander.woll@kit.edu).

Outcome measure

Physical activity was measured using the MoMo Physical Activity Questionnaire (MoMo-PAQ) for adolescents [22], which assesses physical activity in different settings (sports clubs, leisure-time, school, daily activities and overall physical activity). Beside frequency, duration and intensity, the MoMo-PAQ captured data on the type of physical activity in and outside sports clubs. Up to four different physical activities could be mentioned. For the analyses of agreement all information at t0 and t1 were matched, proofing if at both measurement points the same information were given. The MoMo-PAQ has satisfying and similar reliability and validity as other questionnaires for measuring physical activity in adolescents [22]. The reliability of assessing physical activity on the index level for one-week inter-test interval (ICC = intraclass correlation) was between rICC = .60 (p < .01) and rICC = .74 (p < .01) [22]. The ICC for overall physical activity was r = .74 (p < .01), for sports club physical activity rICC = .64 (p < .01) and for leisure-time physical activity rICC = .69 (p < .01). The validity (compared to Actigraph GT1M and the Previous Day Physical Activity Recall) was r = .24 (p < .01) and r = .43 (p < .01) for overall activity, r = .35 (p < .01) and r = .55 (p < .01) for sports club physical activity, and r = .10 and r = .32 (p < .01) for leisure-time physical activity, respectively [22].

In this study, we only considered sports club and leisure-time activities because in Germany physical activity of adolescents and young adults largely takes place in organised sports clubs. In addition, both aspects were assessed using the same instrument for both age groups at both sampling points.

Sports club physical activity (SCPA) was assessed by four items: type of club sports activity, duration (minutes per session) and frequency (times per week) of each club sports activity, and time of the year (month) of each club sports activity. These items were combined in a club sports activity index reflecting active minutes per week at sports clubs:

Clubsportsindex=duration*frequency*numberofmonth/12months

Leisure-time physical activity (LTPA) was assessed by three items: type of leisure-time physical activity, duration (minutes per week) of each leisure-time physical activity, and time of the year (month) of each leisure-time physical activity. These items were combined in the leisure-time physical activity index reflecting active minutes per week at leisure time:

Leisuretimephysicalactivityindex=duration*numberofmonths/12months

The overall sports index (OS index) was calculated by adding club sports activity and leisure-time activity index.

Overall physical activity (OPA) was assessed using a two-item questionnaire [23] capturing information on numbers of days during the last seven days (Item 1) and during a typical week (Item 2) of moderate physical activity of at least 60 minutes per day (not considering physical education classes). The mean of these two items combines to a scale reflecting the days per week with moderate physical activity of one hour or more according to international recommendations.

In order to estimate the change and stability of the compliance with physical activity recommendations two groups were formed (fulfilled/not fulfilled). The recommendation claims that children and adolescents aged between 5 and 17 years should perform at least 60 minutes of moderate to vigorous physical activity (of 5 to 8 metabolic equivalent of task) [24].

Sociodemographic predictors

Sex, age and socioeconomic status (SES) were included as determinants in the analysis. Two age groups were defined for each measurement point: t0: 11 to 13 years (young) and 14 to 17 years (old); t1: 17 to 19 years (young) and 20 to 23 years (old). Socioeconomic status was assessed by a parent questionnaire asking parental educational and professional status and total income of the family household [25] and categorized into three categories low, middle and high [26].

Statistical analyses

All statistical tests were conducted using IBM SPSS 21 (IBM Corporation, Armonk, NY). The study sample was described using descriptive analyses. The tracking of physical activity between baseline and wave 1 was analysed in different ways. First, Spearman’s rank-correlations were calculated to track physical activity of the participants. Second, analyses of variance with repeated measurement were used to examine the mean stability (means). Fisher’s Z transformation was used to compare the Spearman’s rank-order correlations between the different indices. Kappa values were analysed for categorical variables to detect agreement between both measurement points. Outliers were detected using three standard deviations of the physical active participants and excluded from further analyses. 110 cases were identified with data for club sports activity and leisure-time physical activity. Only participants with sports club membership at t0 and t1 were considered for sports club activity. The level of significance was set a priori to α = .05 for all statistical tests.

Missing data

Dealing with missing data is very important in empirical studies because missing data often lead to bias in parametric rating or to small sample sizes [27]. Methods for dealing with unit-nonresponse and item-nonresponse were used to accommodate for these circumstances. Unit-nonresponse was treated by creating a weighting procedure to account for potential bias in outcome variables caused by selective unit-nonresponse (drop-out bias) [19]. In a first step, initial design weights for the baseline sample were defined using information on the probability of selection of the measurement point and the participant within the measurement point. Subsequent data stratification ensured representativeness to the target population (German children and adolescents aged 4–17 years) regarding sex, age, region, migration background and education level. Based on these initial weights, weighted logistic regressions were performed to predict the probability of participation in wave 1. In the process, baseline data of wave 1 responders and nonresponders were used to estimate differences between wave 1 responders and the baseline sample. All longitudinal participants were assigned an individual weight according to the inverse of their probability of participation (inverse probability weighting). Expected differences between wave 1 responders and nonresponders in different variables of interest were identified, and these differences were eliminated by the weighting procedure.

For item nonresponse, the Little’s missing completely at random test [28] revealed that data was missing in a systematic way (χ2 = 1,091, df = 581, p < .001) on item level among participants suggesting that deletion procedures would yield biased estimates [29]. The amount of missing data due to item-nonresponse was low and ranged from 0.3% and 7.6% for all variables. Regression imputations were used to treat missing data due to item-non-response.

Results

Stability of means

Leisure-time physical activity (minutes per week)

Overall LTPA changed significantly from baseline to wave 1 (F1,397 = 7.9, df = 1, p = .005; Tables 1 and 2). The change in LTPA over time was greater for the young group than for the old group (F1,397 = 10.5, df = 1, p = .001). The young group had significantly lower LTPA at t1 than at t0 (F123 = 6.5, df = 1, p = .012) while in the old group LPTA remained nearly unchanged (F1,346 = 0.0, df = 1, p = .890). A significant interaction in LPTA between age, sex and SES was observed (F1,397 = 5.8, df = 2, p = .003).

Table 1.

Mean (1 standard deviation) patient characteristics

LTPA (min./week) SCPA (min./week) OPA (days/week) OS index (min./week)
Indices – t 0
Overall 74.1 ± 98.0 218.6 ± 122.8 3.47 ± 1.82 292.7 ± 164.5
N = 924 N = 296 N = 947 N = 932
Sex boys 81.3 ± 107.0 231.1 ± 124.2 3.78 ± 1.80 312.4 ± 171.0
N = 438 N = 168 N = 447 N = 438
girls 67.3 ± 88.1 200.5 ± 118.6 3.15 ± 1.78 267.8 ± 151.2
N = 496 N = 128 N = 500 N = 494
Age young group 86.4 ± 104.5 112.6 ± 112.8 3.82 ± 1.75 199.0 ± 145.3
N = 116 N = 55 N = 117 N = 117
old group 72.9 ± 97.3 107.9 ± 135.0 3.43 ± 1.82 180.0 ± 179.6
N = 818 N = 241 N = 830 N = 815
SES low 64.5 ± 101.4 189.3 ± 107.1 3.29 ± 1.91 253.8 ± 134.6
N = 185 N = 39 N = 186 N = 184
middle 81.9 ± 100.6 224.6 ± 120.7 3.70 ± 1.76 306.5 ± 170.6
N = 485 N = 166 N = 494 N = 483
high 69.6 ± 89.8 222.0 ± 133.1 3.15 ± 1.78 291.6 ± 158.6
N = 262 N = 91 N = 265 N = 263
Indices – t 1
Overall 74.1 ± 93.5 222.2 ± 133.1 3.31 ± 1.86 296.3 ± 163.2
Sex boys 82.6 ± 102.1 250.5 ± 132.9 3.48 ± 1.85 333.1 ± 165.3
girls 64.2 ± 83.5 181.0 ± 122.6 3.15 ± 1.87 245.2 ± 147.2
Age young group 58.6 ± 87.2 134.4 ± 168.0 3.20 ± 1.79 193.0 ± 170.2
old group 74.6 ± 93.9 72.3 ± 5.4 3.32 ± 1.87 146.9 ± 162.3
SES low 64.2 ± 96.9 230.0 ± 109.3 3.22 ± 1.83 294.2 ± 146.4
middle 73.3 ± 89.4 231.5 ± 132.2 3.30 ± 1.88 304.8 ± 159.5
high 82.2 ± 97.0 199.0 ± 144.5 3.38 ± 1.88 281.2 ± 177.9
Indices – t 1 -t 0
Overall −0.03 ± 128.46 −3.57 ± 155.65 0.16 ± 2.30* −3.6 ± 192.2*
Sex boys −1.34 ± 141.59 −19.37 ± 161.68 0.30 ± 2.31* −20.7 ± 206.4*
girls 3.05 ± 114.70 19.43 ± 143.84 0.00 ± 2.28 22.6 ± 167.7*
Age young group 27.89 ± 139.01* −21.84 ± 140.89 0.62 ± 2.10* 6.0 ± 183.0
old group −1.67 ± 127.16 35.67 ± 154.33 0.11 ± 2.32 33.1 ± 192.9*
SES low 0.27 ± 138.53 −40.70 ± 115.00* 0.07 ± 2.12 −40.4 ± 176.7*
middle 8.62 ± 125.98 −6.90 ± 151.05 0.40 ± 2.40* 1.7 ± 186.8
high −13.75 ± 124.12 22.96 ± 178.53 −0.23 ± 2.25* 10.4 ± 202.3*

(*p < .05).

SES socioeconomic status; LTPA – leisure-time PA; SCPA – sport club PA; OPA – overall PA.

OS index – overall sports index. Only subjects with data for baseline and wave 1 were included in the analysis, and hence the number of subjects at t0 and t1 are the same.

Table 2.

Results of ANOVA with repeated measurements

Index Source Type III sum of squares df Mean square F p
LTPA (min./week) time 64716.3 1 64716.3 7.9 .005
time*sex 12211.3 1 12211.3 1.5 .223
time*age 86628.4 1 86628.4 10.5 .001
time*SES 13236.2 2 6618.1 .8 .447
time*sex*age 23309.3 1 23309.3 2.8 .092
time*sex*SES 42984.8 2 21492.4 2.6 .074
time*age*SES 40840.3 2 20420.2 2.5 .084
time*sex*age*SES 94827.2 2 47413.6 5.8 .003
error(time) 11340256.6 1379 8223.5
SCPA (min./week) time 55058.5 1 55058.5 4.8 .030
time*sex 25927.2 1 25927.2 2.2 .135
time*age 87432.4 1 87432.4 7.6 .006
time*SES 10686.4 2 5343.2 .5 .630
time*sex*age 322.8 1 322.8 0.0 .867
time*sex*SES 42454.7 2 21227.4 1.8 .160
time*age*SES 73267.2 2 36633.6 3.2 .043
time*sex*age*SES 56027.5 2 28013.7 2.4 .090
error(time) 4465186.7 387 11538.0
OPA (days/week) time 20.1 1 20.1 7.7 .005
time*sex 0.0 1 0.0 0.0 .974
time*age 15.3 1 15.3 5.9 .015
time*SES 42.8 2 21.4 8.2 <.001
time*sex*age 2.1 1 2.1 0.8 .373
time*sex*SES 8.9 2 4.5 1.7 .180
time*age*SES 12.4 2 6.2 2.4 .093
time*sex*age*SES 8.4 2 4.2 1.6 .199
error(time) 3747.1 1441 2.6
OS index (min./week) time 58825.1 1 58825.1 3.2 .074
time*sex 2907.8 1 2907.8 0.2 .691
time*age 22768.8 1 22768.8 1.2 .266
time*SES 17939.7 2 8969.9 0.5 .613
time*sex*age 17924.6 1 17924.6 1.0 .323
time*sex*SES 1710.1 2 855.1 0.0 .954
time*age*SES 26708.8 2 13354.4 0.7 .483
time*sex*age*SES 1047.5 2 523.8 0.0 .972
error(time) 6798404.1 371 18324.5

(*p < .05).

LTPA – leisure-time PA; SCPA – sport club PA; OPA – overall PA; OS index – overall sports index.

Sport club physical activity (minutes per week)

Mean SCPA increased significantly from baseline to wave 1 (F387 = 4.8, df = 1, p = .030; Tables 1 and 2). Age was the only determinant that significantly affected the change in SCPA over time (F387 = 6.3, df = 1, p < .012). In addition, a significant interaction in SCPA between time, age, SES was observed (F387 = 3.2, df = 2, p = .043). While the young group showed greater SCPA over the time independent of SES, subjects with high SES showed lower SCPA and those with low or middle SES showed higher SCPA over time. SCPA decreased by 21.8 minutes per week from t0 to t1 in the young group (F55 = 17.4, df = 1, p < .001).

Overall physical activity (days per week)

Mean OPA decreased significantly from baseline to wave 1 (F1,441 = 7.7, df = 1, p = .005; Tables 1 and 2). The analyses revealed a significant age (F1,441 = 5.9, df = 1, p = .015) and SES effect (F1,441 = 8.2, df = 2, p < .001). The young group (F126 = 10.3, df = 1, p = .002) and the old group (F1,346 = 3.7, df = 1, p = .054) had significant lower OPA at t1 than at t0. The post hoc test (Scheffé) showed that participants with a middle SES had a significantly higher OPA than those with a high SES A significant interaction between SES and time was found. According to the post hoc test (Scheffé), participants with a middle SES greater change in OPA than those with a high SES (middle difference: 0.219, p = .05, CI = .000/.438). Participants with a middle or high SES had a significant decrease in OPA from t0 to t1. OPA increased significantly in boys but not in girls (Table 1).

Overall sports index (minutes per week)

Mean overall OS index did not change significantly from baseline to wave 1 (F371 = 3.2, df = 1, p = .074; Tables 1 and 2). No significant interactions between OS index and sociodemographic predictors were detected.

Tracking

Leisure-time physical activity

The Spearman’s rank-order correlation of LTPA ranged from r = −.015 to r = .184 representing a weak correlation for tracking physical activity from adolescence to young adulthood for LTPA independent of the determinants (Table 3). The overall correlation coefficients was r = .094 (p < .001). Girls had significant correlation coefficients (N = 488, r = .109, p = .003) in LTPA while the tracking of LTPA in boys was not significant (N = 427, r = .072, p = .061). However, the correlation coefficients did not differ between boys and girls (z = 0.56, p = .576). Spearman’s rank-order correlations were significant only in the old group (old group: N = 800, r = .102, p < .001; young group: N = 115, r = .063, p = .494). The correlation coefficients did not differ between the young and old groups (z = 0.39, p = .697).

Table 3.

Spearman’s rank-order correlation

LTPA (min./week) SCPA (min./week) OPA (days/week) OS index (min./week)
Overall .094* .248* .211* .266*
Sex boys .072 .214* .198* .200*
girls .109* .239* .201* .332*
Age young group .063 .244 .274* .242
old group .102* .254* .208* .275*
SES low -.015 .416* .371* .269*
middle .075 .228* .115* .301*
high .184* .194* .224* .234*

(*p < .05).

LTPA – leisure-time PA; SCPA – sport club PA; OPA – overall PA; OS index – overall sports index.

Spearman’s rank-order correlations were significant only for participants with a high SES (low: N = 182, r = −.015, p = .785; middle: N = 472, r = .075, p = .053; high: N = 259, r = .184, p < .001; Table 3). The correlation coefficients did not differ between the low and middle SES groups (z = 1.03, p = .303), and the middle and high SES groups (z = 1.44, p = .150). The coefficients differed significantly between the low and high SES groups (z = 2.07, p = .039). Overall, tracking of LTPA was weak for all analysed groups.

Sport club physical activity

The Spearman’s rank-order correlation of SCPA ranged from r = .194 to r = .416 representing a higher stability than LTPA (Table 3). Weak to moderate tracking coefficients of SCPA from adolescence to young adulthood were found. The overall tracking value was r = .248 (p < .001). SCPA correlated significantly in girls (N = 126, r = .239, p = .002) and in boys (N = 164, r = .214, p = .001). The correlation coefficients did not differ between boys and girls (z = 0.22, p = .826). Spearman’s rank-order correlations were significant only in the old group (old group: N = 347, r = .254, p < .001; young group: N = 52, r = .244, p = .082) and did not differ significantly between age groups (z = 0.07, p = .944). Spearman’s rank-order correlations were significant in all SES groups (low: N = 59, r = −.416, p = .001; middle: N = 225, r = .228, p = .001; high: N = 115, r = .194, p = .037). The correlation coefficients did not differ significantly between the low and middle SES groups (z = 1.14, p = .254), between the low and high SES groups (z = 1.24, p = .215) and between the middle and high SES groups (z = 0.27, p = .787).

Overall physical activity

OPA showed weak to moderate stability correlations (r = .115 to r = .371) and weakly tracked from t0 to t1 (r = .211, p < .001; Table 3). OPA had significant correlation coefficients in girls (N = 500, r = .201, p < .001) and in boys (N = 477, r = .198, p < .001). The correlation coefficients did not differ between boys and girls (z = 0.05, p = .960). Spearman’s rank-order correlations were significant in the young (N = 117, r = .274, p = .002) and in the old groups (N = 830, r = .208, p < .001) with no significant differences in stability coefficients (z = 0.69, p = .490). Spearman’s rank-order correlations were significant in all SES groups (low: N = 183, r = .371, p < .001; middle: N = 477, r = .115, p = .002; high: N = 262, r = .224, p < .001). The stability coefficient of OPA was significantly higher in the low SES group than in the middle SES group (z = 3.55, p < .001). The correlation coefficients did not differ between the low and high SES groups (z = 1.67, p = .095) and between the middle and high SES groups (z = 1.28, p = .201).

Overall sports index

The OS index showed moderate stability correlations (r = .200 to r = .332) with low to moderate strength of relation from t0 to t1 (r = .266, p < .001; Table 3). Correlation coefficients for the OS index were significant in girls (N = 161, r = .332, p < .001) and in boys (N = 222, r = .200, p = .003). The correlation coefficients did not differ significantly between boys and girls (z = 1.36, p = .174). Spearman’s rank-order correlations were weak to moderate but not significant in the young (N = 52, r = .242, p = .083) and the old groups (N = 331, r = .275, p < .001). Rank-order correlation coefficients did not differ significantly between age groups (z = 0.23, p = .818). Tracking values were significant in all SES groups (low: N = 59, r = .269, p = .04; middle: N = 210, r = .301, p < .001; high: N = 119, r = .234, p = .012). No significant differences between the different classes of SES were found: middle and low SES (z = 0.23, p = .818), middle and high SES (z = 0.27, p = .535), low and high SES (z = 0.23, p = .818).

Correlation coefficients were significantly lower for LTPA (r = .094) than those for OS index (r = .266; z = 4.71, p < .001), OPA (r = .211; z = 3.19, p = .001) and SCPA (r = .248, z = 2.79, p = .005). OS index was more stable than the OPA (z = 4.25, p < .001) and SCPA (z = 2.11, p = .030), No differences were found for the stability between OPA and SCPA (z = 0.69, p = .490), OPA and OS index (z = 1.56, p = .119) and between OPA and SCPA (z = 0.69, p = .490).

Changes in physical activity groups

The descriptive analyses showed a negative trend, independently of setting. More persons shifted after six years from being active to inactive, independently of setting (LTPA: active-inactive: 54%, inactive-active: 46%; SCPA: member in sport club-not member in sport club: 77.1%, not member in sport club-member in sport club: 22.9%; OS index: active-inactive: 64.3%, inactive-active: 35.7%; OPA: fulfilled-unfulfilled: 58.9%, unfulfilled-fulfilled: 41.1%).

For all settings, the analyses of agreement revealed a poor to fair strength kappa coefficient. The agreement between t0 and t1 of active and inactive, respectively, was 8.9% (k = .089, p = .001) for LTPA; 36.1% (k = .361, p < .001) for SCPA (member/not member); 17.6% (k = .176, p < .001) for OS index and 7.2% (k = .072, p = .005) for OPA (recommendations fulfilled/not fulfilled).

Changes in type of physical activity

SCPA showed small agreement between both measurement points (22.9%, k = .229, p < .001), whereas no agreement between t0 and t1 in LTPA was observed (k = .000, p > .05).

No Gender differences were found in the analyses of agreement. For girls and boys, no agreement between both measurement points was found for SCPA (k = .000, p > .05) and for LTPA (k = .000, p > .05). The analyses of agreement differed between age groups. No agreement of type in SCPA was found in the young age group (k = .000, p > .05) but the old age group showed an agreement of 19.8% (k = .198, p < .001). For LTPA no agreement were found for both age groups (k = .000, p > .05). The analyses of agreement did not differ between SES classes. No agreement of type in SCPA for low SES was found (k = .000, p > .05), for middle SES 31.2% (k = .312, p < .001) and for high SES 12.7% (k = .127, p < .001). In contrast, LTPA showed no agreement (k = .000, p > .05) in all SES classes.

Discussion

The aim of this nationwide representative study was to quantify tracking of leisure-time physical activity (in and outside sports clubs) for 6 years from adolescence into young adulthood in Germany. The results for overall mean stability were inconsistent. While significant changes over time in mean LTPA, SCPA and OPA were observed, OS index did not changed significantly over time. These results suggest that mean OS index is stable over 6 years from adolescence to young adulthood. Significant interactions between time and the determinants age, sex and SES were found for physical activity in all settings. Of the analysed determinants, age had the strongest influence on stability of physical activity in different settings.

While other studies showed higher correlation coefficients for boys [30], sex differences in stability of physical activity in different settings in our study showed inconsistent results. The changes in mean SCPA and mean OPA in boys were higher than in those in girls, but the changes in mean LTPA and PA in girls were higher than those in boys. Consequently, a general statement regarding tracking physical activity in all settings for girls and boys cannot be made. However, separate analyses by sex showed stable mean values in LTPA and SCPA for boys and in LTPA, SCPA and OPA for girls. Possible reasons for changes in physical activity in different settings for girls and for boys include increasingly demanding school requirements [31], the transition from school to other forms of education and the associated limited availability of time [32], relocation or changing personal interests during puberty. Similarly, Gordon-Larson and colleagues determined that young adults are in a period of changes [33]. Other studies showed that—especially for girls—the commitment in physical activity decreased the more demanding the physical activity is [34-36]. Consequently, girls invested less time per week at baseline resulting in smaller overall changes to wave 1. In addition, the support for physical activity from peers [37-39] and parents [37-39] are the strongest factors for identification with physical activities [40]. In case of relocation this support can disappear and evoke changes in physical activity.

Changes in LTPA, SCPA and OS index did not differ between the three SES groups. However, the middle SES group showed significantly greater changes in OPA than the high SES group. These results indicate that the mean physical activity remains stable over the timespan of 6 years independent of social classes.

Stability coefficients did not differ between girls and boys supporting results reported by Herman et al. [41]. In contrast, Telama et al. [4,42] reported lower stability of LTPA, SCPA and OPA in girls than in boys. A possible reason for these discrepancies is that girls may have other interests in their leisure time (such as fashion or music) during puberty than boys [32,43]. While for boys the competition may be important [44], for girls the sociability played an important role [45]. Other studies observed that girls rather engage in physical activities if a same-sex friend joins them in their activity [44]. In our study, tracking coefficients were low for boys and girls. These results confirm previous reports of low tracking coefficients for LTPA, SCPA and OPA [4,42,46,47]. Hence physical activity in adolescence and young adulthood appears to be a volatile behaviour exposed to many destabilising factors.

Rank-order coefficients did not differ between age groups. These results do not correspond to the results of the study by Telama et al. [4] who reported highest correlations in the oldest cohort. However, in that study the young group was very small (N = 55) compared to the old group (N = 830). Hence, it is possible that this age difference does not fully represent true differences between groups, and hence these results should be interpreted with caution.

Differences in stability coefficients between SES groups were observed for LTPA and OPA but not for SCPA and OS indices. As expected, LTPA tracked better in the high SES groups than in the low SES group. In contrast, OPA was more stable in the low SES group than in the middle SES group. Several factors may explain these differences. It is possible that parents of the young age group with a high SES have greater (financial) resources [48] allowing their children to participate in activities other than sports such as playing music requiring increasing time commitments as the children age. In contrast, greater financial resources enable to participate in physical activities [48,49]. Another possible reason is the fact that in this study a large number of the study population relocated after finishing high school requiring reorganising physical and sports activities in the new environment.

In Germany, training in sports clubs is scheduled regularly each week on the same day and time with only minor variations between years [4]. Hence, it was to expect that SCPA is more stable than physical activity outside of sports clubs [30]. However, the results of this study showed that the stability of physical activity did not differ between settings independently of sex, age and SES. Hence, it appears that adolescents who are physically active will not change the setting (sports club versus outside of sports clubs) of their activity as they grow into young adults. Moreover, the peer environment and a relationship of trust to the trainer may explain these results.

In general, comparing our results with those of other studies is difficult because the timespan between sampling points and the age range of study population vary largely between studies [3,8,42,50]. Moreover, most studies only analysed the stability of overall physical activity. Nonetheless, our results are in agreement with those of other studies [7,51,52] with similar study population and intervals. For instance, Twisk et al. [7] found a stability coefficient of r = .340 while other studies reported only rarely significant correlation coefficients but rather significant predictions or tendencies [51,52].

Results of the analyses of agreement for the type of physical activities are inconsistent. While the SCPA showed no agreement for girls and boys, the middle social class showed the highest agreement in SCPA. In addition, only the old age group showed an agreement between both measurement points which could be caused by the small number of participants in the young age group. LTPA showed no agreement for all determinants and age groups.

The correlation coefficients in our study were low which may have been related to the long timespan of 6 years between baseline and wave 1. Indeed, previous studies showed that the longer the interval is the smaller are the stability values. For instance, Basterfield et al. [53] reported rank-order correlations between baseline and wave 1 (2 years interval) of r = .540. The correlation coefficients in our study ranged from .094 to .416. Correlation coefficients in a study with a 22-year interval by Basterfield et al. [53] were not significant. These combined results confirm that physical activity tracks better the shorter the timespan between measurements [30]. The strength of correlations also depends on the reliability of assessing subjective information [4]. Specifically, tracking correlations not only entail stability of the measurement but also its reliability. Therefore, low reliability of physical activity measures is another potential reason for the reported low test-retest-correlations. Therefore, future studies should consider using objective measures for assessing stability of physical activity from adolescence to young adulthood.

Strength and limitations

In this study, we measured physical activity in different settings in a large and representative study sample with a large age range. The focus of our study was to analyse “physical activity”. In Germany, socially conditioned, this physical activity happened mostly in sports clubs, why this aspect played an important role in the analyses. However, overall physical activity was also analysed. Because of the size of the sample, data were collected using a questionnaire that only captures subjective data. Questionnaires tend to overestimate physical activity, and the study sample tends to have difficulties to appreciate the extent (in frequency, duration and intensity) of physical activity [54]. This could lead to diverse information between the measurement points resulting in weak stability over time. Moreover, it is possible that estimated missing data over- or underestimated physical activity values. Finally, the satisfactory reliability may have resulted in lower stability coefficients thereby underestimating stability. Because of the higher reliability of objective measures, an increase of the test-retest correlation would be expected if physical activity would be gather with e.g. accelerometers.

Conclusions

In this representative study, we report on the stability of physical activity in different settings. The results showed that physical activity in different settings is not stable over time and confirmed that physical activity is a fluctuating variable. The poor stability of physical activity over time emphasize the necessity for strategies aiming at making physical activity programs more attractive to adolescents and increasing physical activity in young adults [47].

Acknowledgment

The authors would like to thank Dr. Annegret Mündermann for her writing assistance on behalf of the authors. In addition, the authors would like to thank the field team for data capture. This study was funded by the German Ministry for Family, Affairs, Senior Citizens, Women and Youth and the Federal Ministry of Education and Research.

We acknowledge support by Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft and Open Access Publishing Fund of Karlsruhe Institute of Technology.

Abbreviations

MoMo

Motorik Modul

MoMo-PAQ

MoMo-physical activity questionnaire

ICC

Intraclass correlation

LTPA

Leisure-time physical activity

SCPA

Sport club physical activity

OPA

Overall physical activity

OS index

Overall sports index

SES

Socioeconomic status

Footnotes

Competing interests

The authors declare that they have no competing interests.

Authors’ contributions

AR was responsible for the overall conception and design of this manuscript. DJ supported the process of writing the manuscript, the statistical analysis and interpretation of data. FM was responsible for the critical revision. SS was responsible for the longitudinal data editing and was involved in drafting the manuscript. AW contributed to the design of the study. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.

Contributor Information

Annette Rauner, Email: annette.rauner@kit.edu.

Darko Jekauc, Email: darko.jekauc@hu-berlin.de.

Filip Mess, Email: filip.mess@ph-gmuend.de.

Steffen Schmidt, Email: steffen.schmidt@kit.edu.

Alexander Woll, Email: alexander.woll@kit.edu.

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