Intimacy
Not all individuals feel comfortable
being measured by someone else or being compared with others. Polar
Fitness Test™ can be conducted privately without participation into
e.g. mass testing. Some people with low fitness level may be
embarrassed about their poor physical condition and prior to starting
an organized exercise program that includes testing in the beginning,
prefer to wait for weeks before joining in, just to avoid the
humiliation. People should not be humiliated by test results of poor
physical condition.
Monitoring the progress
It takes a minimum of 6 weeks on an
average to see a demonstrable change in cardiovascular fitness. Less
fit individuals see progress even more rapidly and for more active
individuals more time is needed. The purpose of Polar Fitness Test™
is the same as for all fitness tests, to monitor this progress. For
less active people it's a good idea to enter the more active world of
health and fitness with the Polar Fitness Test™. For more active
people, who have never been tested and who aren't really aware of the
state of their fitness, it gives motivation to keep going. It rewards
any fitness enthusiast to see the improvement with one's own eyes.
To be able to follow the progress
you have to start with measuring the baseline. Polar Fitness Test™
gives you an excellent possibility to create this baseline. For
example, if you decide today to start a regular fitness program the
first thing you have to do is to conduct the Polar Fitness Test™.
Let's assume it gives you an index of 40. This is now your baseline
value.
An average change in cardiovascular
fitness for adults is 12-15 % in 10-12 weeks if moderate intensity
exercise has been conducted 3-4 times a week at least for 30 minutes
each time. In our example this would mean an index increasing from 40
to 45 in 3 months. With Polar Fitness Test™ the progress can be
monitored even weekly. However, the progress is slow and it is not the
exact values, but rather the trend, that is the most important thing
to follow. Losing body weight also increases the index.
Validity and reliability of
Polar Fitness Test™
Validity of a test means that the
test measures what it is supposed to measure and not something else.
The test has been originally developed using artificial neural
networks on 305 laboratory fitness measurements of healthy Finnish men
and women (Väinämö et al. 1996). The correlation coefficient
between the laboratory measures and prediction values was 0.97 and the
mean error in VO2max prediction was 6.5 %.
In further development of the test
119 fitness measurements of healthy American men and women were
included, making a total of 424, and the artificial neural network was
modified into Polar Fitness Test™. In a study on 52 healthy men, who
didn't belong to the group on whom the test was developed, the mean
absolute error in Polar Fitness Test™ prediction was less than 12 %
compared to the laboratory measures of maximal aerobic power. Thus the
validity of the Polar Fitness Test™ is good.
The reliability of a test is a
measure of how consistent and reproducible the test results are on
consecutive trials. The reliability of the Polar Fitness Test™ is
good. When 11 subjects repeated the test in the morning, in the middle
of the day and in the evening during eight days, in both sitting and
laying positions, the average individual standard deviation of
consecutive test results was less than 8 % from the individual mean
value. The standard deviations calculated separately for each time of
the day were all smaller than the standard deviation of all results.
This indicates that the test can be conducted at any time of the day
but it should always be repeated at about the same time.
Polar Fitness Test™ provides an
incentive to exercise and improve fitness. It is an excellent
motivational tool for anyone who wants to achieve his/her fitness
goals.
References
ACSM. The Fitness Book. 2nd
ed. 1998. Human Kinetics.
Devereux Rob. Fitness testing - to
do or not to do? Asiafit March/April 1998, p. 24.
Fletcher, Balady, Froelicher,
Hartley, Haskell, Pollock. Exercise Standards. A statement for
healthcare professionals from the American Heart Association.
Circulation 91,2,580-615,1995.
Jackson, Blair, Mahar, Ross and
Stuteville. Prediction of functional aerobic capacity without exercise
testing. Med Sci Sports Exerc 22,6,863-870,1990.
Väinämö, Tulppo, Mäkikallio, Röning.
An atrificial neural network for human aerobic fitness approximation.
Proceeding of the International Neural Network ICNN, Washington DC,
June 3-6, 1996, pp. 1939-1949.
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