Health is multidimensional, and so is your body. While body mass index (BMI) is a helpful metric for evaluating obesity in populations, there are better ways to measure your health. 听
I could write for days about the confusion my patients have experienced when focusing on BMI as a measure of health鈥攅ven more so the unhealthy compensatory reactions that followed.
In this article, we鈥檒l explore what BMI is, how insurance capitalizes on BMI, why your doctor tracks this number in your chart, and what alternatives we have to measure your health.
Cue you, entering your doctor鈥檚 office, stepping onto the scale. You unpack your pockets鈥攚allet, keys, phone鈥攁nd elect to remove your shoes to save a quarter of a pound. You stand tall and still鈥攈olding your breath鈥攖o avoid accidentally increasing your weight by one to two pounds.
Or perhaps the opposite rings true; you hope you ate enough this week to keep on that extra five pounds that the chemo/radiation, wrestling team, or marathon training prevents you from gaining.听
Our culture places an enormous pressure on your weight. The good news is, weight is not always a direct measure of health.
How Is BMI Calculated?
, BMI is measured by dividing your weight in kilograms (kg) by your height in meters (m)<sup>1</sup>. There are many calculators online that can do the math for you, depending on what metrics you use (meters or inches).
BMI = kg/m2听
BMI provides a measure of body fat based on weight and height for adults. Historically, this indicated your 鈥渃orrect鈥 weight and <sup>2</sup>.
BMI Categories
BMI is grouped into <sup>3</sup>:
- Underweight = <18.5
- Normal weight = 18.5 鈥 24.9
- Overweight = 25 鈥 29.9
- Obese = >30
Brief History of BMI
Origins of BMI
A Belgium mathematician named Lambert Adolphe Jacques Quetelet the BMI equation in the 1800s<sup>4</sup>. He was not a physician, nor did he claim the number would be any direct measurement of health. Squaring the height of an irregularly shaped object, let alone a human, is not the way to accurately determine anyone鈥檚鈥 anything. He developed this metric as a way to gauge rates of obesity in large populations.
Adoption by Life Insurance Companies
Life insurance companies adopted BMI as a way to <sup>5</sup>.
1970s
in medical headlines in 1972 in an article written by Ancel Keys and published in the Journal of Chronic Diseases<sup>6</sup>. He argued that even from the beginning, BMI was not 鈥渇ully satisfactory,鈥 but merely a good rule of thumb in helping to determine our body mass and measurement, while still searching for its meaning in health, disease, and survival. Despite clearly stating the usefulness of BMI in population studies, but not in individual evaluation, medical business took BMI to be the north star to measure an individual鈥檚 cardiovascular health.
Standardization of BMI Categories
In the 1990s, the National Institute of Health (NIH) and the World Health Organization (WHO) reconciled their differences in BMI ranges, and both agreed that a BMI of 25鈥30 should be considered overweight, with >30 meeting criteria for obese. These ranges are used for both men and women. You don鈥檛 need to be a doctor to know that different rulers ought to be used for the two sexes; men and women don鈥檛 even share the same <sup>7</sup>.
Use of BMI to Determine Health Risks
In 2005, the National Center for Health Statistics from 1971鈥2000 that showed those who are 鈥渙verweight鈥 died earlier than those of 鈥渘ormal鈥 weight. This did not take into account adipose tissue percentage or distribution, which we now know plays largely into health outcomes<sup>8</sup>.
ADA and Financial Incentives for Employees
to Title I of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) in 2016 offered guidance to employers on the financial incentives鈥攐r insurance premium discounts鈥攖hey can offer employees to participate in wellness programs and biometric screenings<sup>9</sup>.听
The biometric screenings can include measuring things like blood pressure and BMI. Unfortunately, using BMI as a quick screening method can have negative financial consequences when it comes to insurance premiums.
While the widespread claims made by BMI remain largely over generalized, they continue to be upheld by the insurance industry.听
What happens if your BMI is over 25?
If you register over 25 on the scale, your doctor will likely have a conversation with you about losing weight. And perhaps this is warranted, but BMI itself is not something to cause serious alarm.
Why is your BMI tracked by your doctor?
Healthcare providers record your BMI on every chart for population health metrics, insurance, and billing information. If someone has an abnormal BMI, this adds an additional ICD-10 code that can be billed for, and alerts your provider to screen you for other health issues if warranted.
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Limitations of BMI
Numerous studies have illustrated how tends to your overall health<sup>10,11</sup>.
BMI does not measure body fat directly, nor does it account for sex, ethnicity, muscle mass, or age. A BMI measurement cannot be , as they grow tall during puberty at rates that may not directly match their weights<sup>12</sup>.听
BMI doesn鈥檛 accurately predict cardiometabolic health
In 2016, the International Journal of Obesity published a <sup>11</sup> aimed at disrupting the new U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission rule that allows employers to penalize employees up to 30% in health insurance costs for failing to have normal health criteria, including a normal BMI<sup>9</sup>.
Researchers evaluated over 40,000 adults in the 2005鈥2012 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey. They looked at blood pressure, triglycerides, cholesterol, glucose, insulin resistance, and many other labs that are used to evaluate a person鈥檚 health and compared it to the participants鈥 BMI. The study found:
- 45% of the participants were overweight or obese but cardiometabolically healthy
- 30% of the participants in the normal weight category were cardiometabolically unhealthy
- The cardiometabolic health of almost 75 million U.S. adults is misclassified when using BMI听
Professional weight lifters and athletes have much more muscle than fat (adipose) tissue and can have a high body weight due to a lot of lean body mass. This can make their BMIs register as <sup>13</sup> in some cases.听听
BMI measures quantity, but percent body fat evaluates quality听
Having a high BMI indicates that you could be overweight, or just muscular. The original studies that evaluated BMI in the 1800s largely studied white men; these metrics weren鈥檛 considered for women or other ethnicities<sup>4</sup>.
BMI vs. Death Rates
A study published in JAMA in 2005 showed that overweight people鈥攁ccording to BMI measurements鈥攈ave a death rate similar to that of normal weight people<sup>8</sup>.
Another population study published in 2009 in The Lancet showed that over and underweight persons both have a higher mortality rate than most normal weight people<sup>10</sup>.
Alternatives to BMI
Instead of using BMI, I highly recommend you use the following:
Waist-to-Hip Ratio
Here鈥檚 how to measure your waist-to-hip ratio:
- Measure the circumference at the level of your belly button and again at the thickest circumference of your thighs.听
- Divide the waist/hip numbers (the units will not affect the result).听
Women should have a ratio less than 0.8 and men less than 0.95.听
The World Health Organization as<sup>14</sup>:
- >0.85 waist-to-hip ratio for women
- >0.9 for men
Many studies illustrate that BMI underestimates the rate of true obesity, and that measuring the waist-to-hip ratio more accurately predicts , like <sup>15, 16</sup>. BMI tends to overestimate fat percentage on those with generally lean body mass (athletes) and underestimates excess fat on those with less lean body mass.
Percent Body Fat
Percent body fat to be more accurate than BMI in identifying obesity<sup>17</sup>.听
While there healthy ranges for percent body fat, a that cardio-metobolic risks increase when body fat percentages exceed 25.8% for men and 37.1% for women<sup>18, 19</sup>.
Is having some body fat healthy?
Yes. External and internal (visceral) fat are absolutely necessary to support and protect our internal organs. It provides a buffer in the event we become gravely sick and cannot eat for some time, or if you experience a serious high-impact accident<sup>3</sup>.
Focus on Nutrition, Diet, and Exercise, Not BMI
I have never made a serious medical decision for a patient based on their BMI, including medication changes. While I鈥檝e had my fair share of nutrition, diet, exercise, and weight conversations, I don鈥檛 bring BMI into the mix. When my patients ask me for their BMI, I鈥檓 happy to share, but I encourage you to spend as little time focusing on your BMI as I do.听
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