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tamarian
Mon, Jul-10-06, 21:10
Newswise — When researchers use percent of body fat data to assess obesity rather than body mass index (BMI), the huge gap in obesity rates between African-American and white women, for example, is cut in half, and white men are found to have a much higher risk of obesity than African-American men.

While the medical literature has long showed that percent of body fat is a more accurate measure of fatness than BMI, most social science researchers still use BMI because that is what is available in most social science-based data sets. But because BMI ignores the difference between fat and fat-free mass like bone and muscle, such studies, for example, overstate the obesity of African-Americans relative to whites. That's because on average, African-Americans have more nonfat mass, says John Cawley and Richard Burkhauser, professors of policy analysis and management who have conducted an analysis comparing measures of obesity. Their report offers a conversion tool to enable researchers using social science data sets to calculate body fat percentages and other more accurate measures of obesity in data sets that only contain information on height and weight.

Using more accurate measures of obesity makes a difference. "We've already found indications of a correlation between high percentages of body fat and employment disability," said Burkhauser. "And we wouldn't have been able to determine that using BMI."

The researchers' working paper was released in June by the National Bureau of Economic Research.

http://www.newswise.com/articles/view/521795/?sc=rsmn

Uliana
Mon, Jul-10-06, 22:48
Gotta wonder why it took them so long to figure this out. BMI is a terrible way to figure out if you're obese or not. Just seems like a way for Big Pharma to say more people are obese so they have to buy their meds. I mean, Arnold Schwarzenegger in his "Conan" movie days would he'd be considered overweight or even obese by BMI standards. :rolleyes: Body fat percentage is a much more accurate means of determining obesity. Body Fat percentage what my health/exercise instructor said to use when I went to SDSU back in the late 80s/early 90s. That, combined with body frame/height.