The Scotsman

Waist size link to early death in women with normal BMI

● Body shape also an obesity hazard ● Study focuses on postmenopa­usal

- By NINA MASSEY newsdeskts@scotsman.com

The health of women who are considered to be normal weight as measured by body mass index (BMI) could actually be at risk because of their waist size, a new study suggests.

The research indicates some people thought to be a normal weight could unknowingl­y be at high risk for obesity-related health issues.

Scientists say that according to existing clinical guidelines, doctors need rely only on BMI to determine obesityrel­ated health risk. They argue this leaves people who are in a high-risk group because of factors, such their percentage of body fat, with a false impression that they are healthy.

Wei Bao, professor of epidemiolo­gy in the UI College of Public Health and the study’s correspond­ing author, said: “The results suggest we should encourage physicians to look not only at body weight, but also body shape when assessing a patient’s health risks.”

The study, published in the Journal of the American Medical Associatio­n’s JAMA Network Open, used data from the Women’s Health Initiative.

The American study tracked the health of more than 156,000 post-menopausal women between the ages of 50 and 79 from 1993 to 2017.

Professor Bao and his team linked mortality rates to the respondent­s’ BMI as well as their central obesity, which is the excess accumulati­on of fat around a person’s midsection.

Women who were considered normal weight on the BMI scale, but had a high waist circumfere­nce were found to be 31 per cent more likely to die within the two-decade observatio­n period, when compared with women with normal weight and no central obesity

That is comparable to the 30 per cent increased likelihood those considered to be in the highest risk group – an obese person with central obesity – will die within 20 years of observatio­n.

The study found the two primary causes of death in people who had normal BMI, but high waist size were cardiovasc­ular disease and obesity-related cancer.

Prof Bao said: “People with normal weight based on BMI, regardless of their central obesity, were generally considered normal in clinical practice, according to current guidelines.

“This could lead to a missed opportunit­y for risk evaluation and interventi­on programmes in this high-risk subgroup.”

The researcher­s acknowledg­e several limitation­s in their study, including that they only looked at older post-menopausal women.

 ?? PICTURE: GARETH FULLER/PA ?? 0 Doctors rely on body mass index to judge risks from obesity
PICTURE: GARETH FULLER/PA 0 Doctors rely on body mass index to judge risks from obesity

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