164 people with coronary heart disease will complete a treadmill test and activities-of-daily-living with simultaneous measurement of oxygen-uptake and device measured (accelerometer) physical activity.
This will improve the accuracy of device-measured physical activity by developing heart disease specific accelerometer cut-point equations for different physical activity intensities based on the relationship between oxygen uptake and accelerometer activity counts from these activities.
A limitation of the few studies that measure physical activity using accelerometers in this population, is the use of inappropriate accelerometer intensity cut-points derived from healthy populations. Without accurate measurement of physical activity, clinicians are unable to monitor physical activity adherence, nor the effectiveness of physical activity interventions. Additionally, researchers are unable to determine the relationship between physical activity and health outcomes to develop disease-specific physical activity guidelines which may differ from the public health guidelines.