Ethnicity key to accurate obesity measurements
April 22nd, 2010 - 6:29 pm ICT by ANIWashington, April 22 (ANI): A new study has found that the current National Institutes of Health BMI cut-off values fail to identify many women as obese, as it does not take ethnic differences in body composition into consideration.
According to the new research from the University of Texas Medical Branch the BMI cut-off values for obesity are too high for many reproductive-age women in the U.S. and should be adjusted to produce proper diagnosis of obesity.
Researchers found that the current BMI standards misclassify as “not obese” nearly half of reproductive-age women who are defined as obese by the World Health Organization, which uses actual body fat percentage to determine obesity.
Of particular concern is the finding that more than half of white women and more than two-thirds of Hispanic women are obese by the WHO standard.
The study is the first to look at obesity classifications among ethnically diverse reproductive-age women, and it finds that a single BMI value is not appropriate for a diverse population and that racial and ethnic-specific BMI cut-off values are needed.
BMI standards are the most widely used tool for identifying overweight and obese individuals.
“It is especially important to accurately assess obesity in reproductive-age women, as they are more likely to be obese than similarly aged men,” lead author Dr. Mahbubur Rahman assistant professor in the UTMB department of obstetrics and gynaecology and Center for Interdisciplinary Research in Women’s Health, said.
“These women are at risk for cardiovascular disease, diabetes and other obesity-related health conditions and may forgo or be overlooked for needed tests and treatments,” Rahman stated.
Over the past 20 years, the U.S. has seen a dramatic increase in obesity, which the NIH defines as having a BMI greater than 30 kilograms per meter squared - a measurement calculated by dividing an individual’s body mass by the square of his or her height (kg/m2).
Comparatively, the WHO defines obesity as greater than 25 percent body fat in men and greater than 35 percent in women. While this criterion is an accurate gauge, it is expensive and difficult to measure.
The study analysed 555 women between 20 and 33 based on age, height, weight, BMI, and body composition. The subjects included 189 white, 159 black and 207 Hispanic women.
The researchers assessed subjects’ obesity rates and BMI accuracy using three measurements: the current NIH BMI, the WHO guidelines and the researchers own ethnic-specific BMI cut-off values.
Using the current NIH BMI, 205 women were classified as obese. The obesity rate in black and Hispanic women - 46.5 percent and 37.7 percent, respectively - was significantly higher than in white women (28 percent).
However, the WHO guidelines classified 350 women as obese - 63.1 percent of the total sample. The obesity rate was highest among Hispanic women at 69.1 percent. The rates were similar in white and black women, with 58.7 percent and 60.4 percent, respectively, classified as obese.
Finally, researchers applied their own ethnic-specific BMI cut-off values and found that 311 women were obese.
These differing cut-off values were determined through statistical procedures that identified BMI values corresponding to the WHO’s definition of obesity.
The values also take into account the fact that white and Hispanic women have approximately three percent higher body fat than black women for a given BMI.
Currently, NIH BMI obesity rate calculations show that black women have the highest obesity rate.
However, these study findings suggest that Hispanic women have the highest rates - based on body fat percentage - and that obesity prevention programs should place special emphasis on Hispanic women.
“BMI is not ‘one size fits all’. Inaccurate classification can decrease the impact of obesity prevention programs that will result in many women not receiving the help they need,” senior author Dr. Abbey Berenson, professor in the department of obstetrics and gynaecology and director of the UTMB Center for Interdisciplinary Research in Women’s Health, said.
The researchers recommend that women whose BMI is between 25 and 29.9 kg/m2 receive additional counselling to reduce their body weight and avoid obesity related morbidity.
Berenson adds that lowering the current NIH cut-off values may result in labelling a few women as obese who are not, but that this would be far offset by the benefit of reaching millions of women in need of body weight and health interventions.
The researchers believe these findings are applicable to men and other age groups and anticipate follow-up studies.
The findings have been published in the May issue of Obstetrics and Gynecology. (ANI)
- Nearly 25pc of overweight women think they're normal size: Study - Nov 23, 2010
- What's your ideal body mass index? - Dec 02, 2010
- Young women often fail to spot weight gain - Jan 11, 2012
- Obese and overweight women, kids think they weigh less - Mar 24, 2011
- Birth control pills do not cause weight gain: Study - Jan 20, 2011
- Smoking doesn't boost breast cancer risk in obese postmenopausal women - Apr 04, 2011
- Study shows breast cancer risk factors differ among races - Apr 26, 2010
- Short or long sleep may impact fat accumulation in youngsters - Mar 01, 2010
- Exposure to bodycare products linked to childhood obesity - Jan 21, 2012
- Most Americans struggle with long-term weight loss: Study - Sep 04, 2010
- Avoiding or controlling diabetes may cut cancer risk, mortality - Apr 04, 2011
- Women take longer to deliver babies than 50 years ago - Apr 01, 2012
- Belly fat linked to development of asthma - Sep 26, 2011
- Miscarrying women can also have successful pregnancy - May 31, 2010
- Babies born by caesarean more likely to be obese - May 24, 2012
Tags: bmi, body composition, body fat percentage, body mass, compar, disease diabetes, dramatic increase, health conditions, hispanic women, national institutes of health, obese individuals, obesity researchers, obstetrics and gynaecology, proper diagnosis, related health, reproductive age women, texas medical branch, university of texas medical branch, white women, world health organization