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Better than a BMI? New obesity scale proposed

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CHICAGO | Sun Mar 6, 2011 11:25pm EST

CHICAGO (Reuters) - Scientists have developed a new way to measure whether a person is too fat without having people step on the scale.

The new measure, called the Body Adiposity Index, or BAI, relies on height and hip measurements, and it is meant to offer a more flexible alternative to body mass index, or BMI, a ratio of height and weight, U.S. researchers said on Thursday.

BMI has been used to measure body fat for the past 200 years, but it is not without flaws, Richard Bergman of the University of Southern California, Los Angeles, and colleagues wrote in the journal Obesity.

While there are other, more complex ways to measure body fat beyond simply stepping on a scale, BMI is widely used both by researchers and doctors.

It is calculated by dividing weight in kilograms by height in meters squared. A person who is 5 feet 5 inches tall is classified as overweight at 150 pounds (68 kg) and obese at 180 pounds (82 kg).

But there is a lot of wiggle room in that calculation.

For example, women and men with the same BMI might have very different levels of extra flab. BMI numbers cannot be generalized across different ethnic groups or used with athletes, who have extra lean body mass.

The team made the index using data from a Mexican-American population study. They confirmed the scale's accuracy using an advanced device called a dual-energy X-ray absorption or DEXA scanner. Tests in a study of African Americans showed similar findings, suggesting BAI can be used across different racial groups.

BAI is a complex ratio of hip circumference to height that can be calculated by doctors or nurses with a computer or calculator.

The team says BAI still needs some fine tuning, and they still need to test it among whites and other ethnic groups, but they think it has promise as new tool, especially in remote settings with limited access to reliable scales.

"After further validation, this measure can be proposed as a useful measure of percent fat, which is very easy to obtain. However, it remains to be seen if the BAI is a more useful predictor of health outcome, in both males and females, than other indexes of body adiposity, including the BMI itself," the team wrote.

Obesity has become a global epidemic, with more than half a billion people, or one in 10 adults worldwide, considered to be obese -- more than double the number in 1980. Obesity-related diseases account for nearly 10 percent of U.S. medical spending, or an estimated $147 billion a year.

(Reporting by Julie Steenhuysen in Chicago; Editing by Paul Simao)

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Comments (3)
ConstFundie wrote:
Using DNA destroying, ionizing, radiation to check your fat is absurd. Just asking for skin cancer.

Mar 07, 2011 10:33am EST  --  Report as abuse
Shaunta wrote:
A) Why use the word flab in this sentence: For example, women and men with the same BMI might have very different levels of extra flab. It’s demeaning and unnecessary.

B) In 1980, people with a BMI up to 30 were considered ‘normal weight.’ Changing the perimeters of who is fat and who isn’t does not make an epidemic.

Instead of giving people one more reason to beat themselves up, how about we start encouraging EVERYONE, regardless of weight, to be more healthy. Everyone talks about being so concerned about fat people and their health. But then we encourage behavior, such as starvation or very restricted eating, that would cause alarm in a thinner person.

Mar 07, 2011 11:00am EST  --  Report as abuse
bepa wrote:
Can’t you look at someone and see whether that person is obese with a fairly high rate of accuracy?

If someone has large bones or is very muscular couldn’t that be observed also?

Just another indication of a denial that most people are too heavy…

Mar 07, 2011 11:42am EST  --  Report as abuse
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