Daily Mail

Obesity crisis ‘even worse than thought’

- From Tom Leonard In New York

THE obesity epidemic could be far than previously realised because of serious flaws in the way body fat is measured, according to a study.

Researcher­s said the Body Mass Index – the formula usually used to determine fat – drasticall­y underestim­ated how many people should regard themselves as unhealthil­y overweight or obese.

More than a third of adults in the U.S. are considered obese.

But the New York study concluded that 39 per cent of Americans were being classified as overweight on the basis of their BMI when they were actually obese.

The study’s authors, Dr Eric Braverman, of Weill Cornell Medical School, and Dr Nirav Shah, the New York state health commission­er, calculated the BMI – weight in kg divided by height in metres squared – of nearly 1,400 adult patients at a private health clinic.

They then compared the results with those of a more sophistica­ted measuremen­t, a blood test combined with a Dual Energy X-ray Absorptiom­etry (DXA) scan, which measures a person’s body fat, muscle mass and bone density.

The comparison found BMI wrongly classified half of the women, and one in four men.

While only 26 per cent of the patients were classed as obese according to BMI, 65 per cent of them fell into that category when measured with the DXA scan. Dr Braverman said BMI should be called the ‘ baloney mass index’ because it was so inaccurate.

‘The Body Mass Index is an insensitiv­e measure of obesity, prone to under-diagnosis,’ he said.

The study found BMI was especially prone to underestim­ating obesity in women.

In addition, the likelihood of error increased as they got older.

Fifty-nine per cent more women aged 70 or over were classified as obese when measured with a DXA scan then their BMI suggested.

Researcher­s said this was because women lost more muscle to fat than men as they age.

As BMI does not distinguis­h between muscle and fat, it doesn’t pick up on the change.

‘BMI does not tell you how much fat you have,’ Dr Braverman added.

DEATHS from womb cancer have increased by 20 per cent over the past decade, driven by rising obesity, experts warn.

The death rate in the UK from womb cancer has risen from 3.1 to 3.7 per 100,000 since the mid-1990s.

This means more than 1,900 women are dying from the disease each year, compared with fewer than 1,500 at the turn of the millennium, the charity Cancer Research UK said.

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