The
standard script we read or listen to in news articles and discussions about
obesity is of the health perils of being a rotund fatso – a.k.a. obese. Intuitively this makes sense but thanks to
modern medicine and pharmacology, these health perils may not always translate
with a shorter life.
Results
published about three years ago of an analysis of the relationship between
weight and mortality risk provide some interesting information that challenges
our intuitiveness about the relationship between obesity and life expectancy.
The
results of this study were that all adults categorized as overweight and most
of those categorized as obese had lower mortality risk that what we call normal-weight
individuals.
Skeptics
may find comfort in knowing that body mass index (BMI) measurements were used in
this analysis to categorize individuals as obese or normal weight.
So
this means a heavily-muscled professional athlete who stands 6 feet tall and
tips the scale at 200 lbs. with a very low bodyfat percentage gets classified
as overweight. But an average and
non-athletic Joe Blow who is 6 feet tall and tips the scale at 160 lbs. with a
body appearance commonly described as skinny fat gets classified as normal weight.
Notwithstanding
this BMI limitation, the analysis may cause some middle-aged men who are
chasing a long life to improve their odds by fattening up a bit.
Pax
Domini sit semper vobiscum
No comments:
Post a Comment