Dick Whitman
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- May 1, 2009
- Messages
- 45,703
I saw this story over the weekend, and it seems to continue to generate some buzz.
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/02/health/study-suggests-lower-death-risk-for-the-overweight.html?_r=1&pagewanted=all&
Essentially, a very extensive evaluation of various studies shows that overweight people - not obese, but simply overweight - have a lower mortality rate than thin people. It boggles the mind, really, since it's so counterintuitive. I don't think that BMI is perfect, because you have some exceptions like very muscular people that BMI doesn't account for. But you'd think that such people would be the exceptions, not the rule, in a study of millions of people. So I doubt that accounts for this result.
I think the story also mentions that overweight people are more likely to have major health problems actually identified and diagnosed because they have to seek medical attention.
A follow-up op-ed piece today says that our "fear of fat" is "absurd," and speculates that these findings will be largely ignored because they don't fit the narrative:
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/03/opinion/our-imaginary-weight-problem.html?hp
Interesting stuff, for sure. If I recall from the story, and if I'm interpreting correctly, even obese people aren't as at-risk as we thought.
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/02/health/study-suggests-lower-death-risk-for-the-overweight.html?_r=1&pagewanted=all&
Essentially, a very extensive evaluation of various studies shows that overweight people - not obese, but simply overweight - have a lower mortality rate than thin people. It boggles the mind, really, since it's so counterintuitive. I don't think that BMI is perfect, because you have some exceptions like very muscular people that BMI doesn't account for. But you'd think that such people would be the exceptions, not the rule, in a study of millions of people. So I doubt that accounts for this result.
I think the story also mentions that overweight people are more likely to have major health problems actually identified and diagnosed because they have to seek medical attention.
A follow-up op-ed piece today says that our "fear of fat" is "absurd," and speculates that these findings will be largely ignored because they don't fit the narrative:
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/03/opinion/our-imaginary-weight-problem.html?hp
Interesting stuff, for sure. If I recall from the story, and if I'm interpreting correctly, even obese people aren't as at-risk as we thought.