Publication details

The reliability, validity and usefulness of the 30–15 intermittent fitness test for cardiorespiratory fitness assessment in military personnel

Authors

PARAVLIĆ Armin SIMUNIC Bostjan PIŠOT Rado RAUTER Samo STUHEC Stanko VODICAR Janez

Year of publication 2022
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Sports Studies

Citation
Web https://trebuchet.public.springernature.app/get_content/cd69a714-3da2-4c90-b35e-e5ea80491ad5
Doi http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-20315-3
Keywords Cardiorespiratory Fitness; Exercise Test; Heart Rate; Humans; Military Personnel; Oxygen Consumption; Physical Fitness; Reproducibility of Results
Description 1o?.:?????????Scientific Reports | (2022) 12:16087 | https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-20315-3www.nature.com/scientificreports The reliability, validity and usefulness of the 30–15 intermittent fitness test for cardiorespiratory fitness assessment in military personnel Armin H. Paravlic1,2,3*, Bostjan Simunic2 , Rado Pisot2 , Samo Rauter1 , Stanko Stuhec1 & Janez Vodicar1 The objectives of this study were to investigate the reliability, validity, and usefulness of the 30–15 intermittent fitness test (30–15IFT) in soldiers. The 34 infantry members of the Slovenian armed forces were recruited as participants. Participants performed the continuous incremental treadmill test (TR), a 2-mile run (2 MR ) test, and two 30–15IFT tests. Additionally, participants were divided into a highest-scoring group (HSG) and a lowest-scoring group (LSG) based on their scores on the Army Physical Fitness Test. A very high reliability ratings were observed for 30–15IFT measures, as follows: end-running speed (ERS) ERSIFT (ICC = 0.971) , maximal heart rate (HR max ) HR maxIFT (IC = 0.960) , and maximal relative oxygen consumption (VO 2max ) VO2max-IFT (ICC = 0.975) . Although 30–15IFT measures demonstrated high correlations (r = 0.695–0.930) to the same measures of TR test, ERS, HR max and VO2max were higher in the 30–15IFT (p > 0.05) . Furthermore, ERSIFT and predicted VO 2maxIFT were higher in HSG compared to LSG, whereas HR max did not differ. The results of this study show that the 30–15IFT test is a reliable, valid and useful tool for assessing cardiorespiratory fitness in the armed forces. Moreover, the ERS and predicted VO 2 max values derived from the 30–15IFT could be considered more sensitive markers of combat readiness than the parameters derived from the TR and 2 MR tests.

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