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These are my assistants, Coleman and Phil.
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They're both around the same height, weight, and consequently, they have the same Body Mass Index — or BMI.
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But if you split them open Damien Hirst style
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or just compare the results of their body scans you can see a slight difference.
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Phil has more body fat than Coleman, and Coleman has more muscle than Phil.
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Although BMI is a popular measure to assess if a person's weight might be putting them at risk for obesity-related diseases, its results can be pretty misleading and less nuanced than we'd like.
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So the BMI is an index that looks at somebody's body weight divided by their height.
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So the formula is the body weight in kilograms divided by the height in square meters.
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18.5 and below is underweight, 18.5 to 24.9 is your healthy range, 25 to 29.9 is overweight, and a BMI over 30 is classified as obese.
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With the idea being that the taller somebody is, the more they should weigh.
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Kinda weird how a single decimal point can separate being overweight from being obese.
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The major problem with using BMI as a marker of health when it comes to body weight, because it penalizes you if you have a lot of muscle and you're healthier.
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Let"s use professional athlete Marshawn Lyncwh as an example.
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He's 5'11, 215 lbs, and his BMI is 30.
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He'd be categorized as obese.
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That is because BMI doesn't distinguish muscle from fat.
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We are really concentrating on how much muscle does somebody have, because muscle it's the metabolic engine.
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It's the thing that burns calories and the more muscle you have
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the easier it is for you to stay at a lower and
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more healthy body fat percentage not necessarily a BMI.
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In this way, BMI's reliability as an indicator of health breaks down for athletes like Lynch.
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There are several more variables that can influence the interpretation of BMI.
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Things like age, gender, and ethnicity.
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While BMI is a useful measure for a large population study, for example,
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to compare relative obesity rates from state to state;
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it becomes more problematic when you use it to determine an individual's health.
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The body mass index was introduced in the early 19th century.
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This guy who created the formula — I'm so sorry, I'm gonna butcher his name,
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Lambert Adolphe Jacques Quetelet — wasn't even a physician.
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Quetelet was a Belgian mathematician.
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And his reason for creating the formula was to study the “normal man”, not obesity.
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Its use shifted to study obesity because of Ancel Keys.
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In 1972, Keys used the formula in his "Indices of Relative Weight and Obesity” study, renamed
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the formula to body mass index, and from there the “new” measure caught on among researchers.
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Over the years, its use in the health professional field grew and it's pretty much stuck around since.
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It's easy to use, cheap, fast, and its right about 80% of the time.
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So even though BMI has stuck around for more than 200 years,
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it's not the be-all and end-all indicator.
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There are more effective ways to assess to body composition, and overall health.
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Hydrostatic weighing, or underwater weighing, is an option.
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Along with MRI scans, and waist-to-hip ratio.
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Medical tests like checking blood pressure, your glucose levels, resting metabolic rate,
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can further give a picture of overall health.
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I went to George Washington University, and lab director Todd Miller showed me another way,
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using dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry or DEXA image.
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It measures total body composition, including fat mass, lean body mass, and bone density.
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So the green is the areas where the body is very lean.
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The yellow areas of moderate fat.
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And the red areas of high fat.
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So this person was here July 3rd she had 72 pounds of fat and 109 pounds of muscle.
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And in December 27th of this year she had at thirty seven pounds of fat in 115 pounds of muscle.
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Using this chart you can see if this person stepped on a scale, they'd only see they lost 29 pounds.
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What the scale wouldn't say is that they gained six pounds of muscles,
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and BMI wouldn't say that either.
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So even if two people have similar BMIs,
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that one number will never truly give either of them
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the full picture of their overall wellbeing.
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BMI is an indirect measurement of one aspect of an individual's health.
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So while it can be helpful, it shouldn't be the only way to understand the human body.