(no title)
zolland | 2 years ago
I think due to its generalized nature there are exceptions where it doesn't even apply (like people who are weight training, pregnant women etc).
I also think it is becoming apparent that weight alone is not as useful of a metric as was once believed. It doesn't do a great job of identifying whether or not someone is healthy.
So maybe it is the best that institutions can do to gauge the health of a population with the data given, but I think it could be improved drastically with extra metrics (I've heard of measurements around the body being used).
There is a subset of people who are being misidentified as unhealthy or overweight. Idk how large it is but it seems significant.
angrais|2 years ago
>> I also think it is becoming apparent that weight alone is not as useful of a metric as was once believed.
Being fat is bad for your health. That is a fact. No amount of body positivity advertisements will change that fact. It is healthier to be thinner than obese. Look at the graph above to see BMIs impact on other health outcomes.
Also, if you think the obesity crisis is fake/blown up then simply go outside in most American cities and you'll see that many people are obese.
> There is a subset of people who are being misidentified as unhealthy or overweight. Idk how large it is but it seems significant.
Again, this is not relevant as the subset of people is so small compared with the whole population.
The "data given" is included in BMI. Your relative weight is an indicator of multiple other health outcomes.
zolland|2 years ago
Then don't.
> if you think the obesity crisis is fake/blown up
I don't think obesity is fake or overblown. That's what the article was trying to argue.
I do however think BMI has its flaws and that those flaws are pretty significant when it comes to assessing individual health.
> Being fat is bad for your health... it is healthier to be thinner than obese
There is a healthy body fat % range but it is all very dependent on someone's activity and consumption.
strken|2 years ago
Sorry if this is nitpicky, but responding to the claim is difficult without defining it precisely. For example, see this figure from a study comparing BMI and BF% in Greece: https://www.researchgate.net/figure/BMI-versus-body-fat-perc.... You can see that BMI incorrectly says a lot of people are healthy when they're obese in terms of body fat, but if you don't agree that body fat is a metric of health then I'd first need to convince you of that.
Edit: I'll also note that in that figure you can see the number of people who are incorrectly labelled as obese by BMI but not by BF%, and it's much smaller than the other way round. BMI tends to make your population look healthier than it really is, whereas most people who say BMI is flawed are making the opposite argument.
lmm|2 years ago
All models are false, some are useful. BMI is imperfect, but arguing we should ignore it because it has exceptions is like arguing we should ignore that the Earth is round because it isn't perfectly spherical. Looking at BMI alone is occasionally misleading, but it's a hell of a lot better than not looking at anything, which is the realistic alternative.
> So maybe it is the best that institutions can do to gauge the health of a population with the data given, but I think it could be improved drastically with extra metrics (I've heard of measurements around the body being used).
No-one has identified any such drastic improvements. Measuring body fat percentage gives you a small improvement over BMI alone, but it's hard to do at home and only really matters for people with very high muscle mass (who are most likely already using more advanced measurements than BMI alone).