In the ongoing war on obesity, health officials have consistently focused on Body Mass Index, or BMI, as a measure of weight
appropriate to a certain height.
The bad news is that
more than a third of Americans, 34.9 percent, are obese, with a BMI of over 30, according to 2014 study by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention published
in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA). Another third of Americans
are overweight, according to the CDC, with a BMI of between 25 and 30.
But that's not where
the bad news ends. Many health experts have long been concerned that BMI does
not properly account for people who look svelte but have fat hidden away,
making them "normal weight obese."
Those people can still
store away reservoirs of fat in the body or even in the organs or muscles,
leading to serious health consequences similar to those of a person whose BMI
indicates they're overweight, experts note.
A 2010 study published
in the European Heart Journal found that as many as 30 million Americans are
suspected of having normal weight obesity.
It’s absolutely true
there are some people who seem like no matter what they’re doing, they look
really good but looks can be deceiving.
People who had heart
attacks should go to a rehab program and look perfectly fine. But "if you
measured their body fat, they had a greater proportion of fat than they would
have thought."
It's key to be clear
that apparent thinness does not always equal health and that even a skinny
person with a low BMI can be unhealthy if fat has built up around their organs.
Fat affects different
kinds of inflammatory substances that have been implicated in heart disease and diabetes. They can cause damage to blood vessel walls and
affect how your blood vessel works.
Some body fat is
essential to stay healthy, with a range stretching up to 25 percent of body
weight for women and around 15 percent for men.
People who are thin and active
likely don't need to be afraid that they have normal weight obesity, she noted.
The bottom line is
think about your lifestyle ... no matter what your weight is. Irrespective of
your weight, everyone is going to benefit to shift your diet and eat more
fruits and vegetables, and not smoking and not over-drinking.
People who focus on losing weight are often frustrated when the scale
refuses to budge, she said, but a healthy lifestyle overall will give
tremendous benefit, even if it's not reflected on the scale.
You can be smug and
healthy and a little overweight.
Reference:
JAMA - Journal of American Medical Association
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