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In reply to the discussion: More than 75% of US adults may meet criteria for obesity under new definition: Study [View all]NickB79
(20,295 posts)11. This has been known for years
There have been studies going back a decade that found this. This one is from 2011.
https://www.nature.com/articles/ijo2011100
We found that 29% of subjects classified as lean and 80% of individuals classified as overweight according to BMI had a BF% within the obesity range.
The primary reason is that people who score as a "healthy weight" on the BMI scale, and don't appear obese, are in reality severely under-muscled due to lack of physical activity.
It's ironic that people have been claiming that BMI isn't accurate for years. When more accurate measurements are included that show that BMI actually underestimates obesity, that too is rejected. It's almost like a sizeable portion of the population just wants to ignore the serious health effects of obesity because it's uncomfortable to address.
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More than 75% of US adults may meet criteria for obesity under new definition: Study [View all]
BumRushDaShow
Dec 29
OP
Uh huh. Why do smell the whiff of big pharma around the edges? I love when they do this. It's not the first time
Vinca
Dec 29
#2
Exactly. Maybe someday the focus can embrace lifestyle changes like nutrition, exercise and stress management.
TheRickles
Dec 29
#6
Few of us meet the ever-changing standards, but here we are. Living and breathing. I'm about to turn 77.
Vinca
Dec 30
#36
So with such statistics the logical approach would be for the gov to have a plan to combat it.
twodogsbarking
Dec 29
#16
so - you redefine 'obesity' to the point where it becomes an irrelevance - and people
stopdiggin
Dec 29
#26