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Medical
World Debates
Risk of Being Overweight
There is little doubt among mainstream
health professionals that being truly obese is a health hazard.
But what about the borderline plump? The mildly pudgy? All those
people with BMIs between 25 and 29, who according to the charts
are overweight?
Government health agencies often
lump all degrees of overweight together, noting for instance that
over 60 percent of Americans are too heavy. But more than half
of these people roughly one-third of all Americans and
800 million people worldwide are overweight but not obese.
Riding to the mall one Saturday,
Joanne Ikeda's younger sister turned to her and asked, out of
nowhere, "Do you know that I am now overweight?"
From heart-sinking personal experience,
millions upon millions of people can imagine exactly what led
up to that admission. She had stepped on the scales and noticed
a number a little north of usual. So she looked it up on a body
mass index chart. And No! she was officially too
heavy.
Not obese, not even close. But
her BMI was 26, a full, leaden point above the carved-in-stone
cutoff for being overweight.
Many who are overweight but not
obese are like Ikeda's sister, Irene Pakel: 55 years old, 5-foot-3,
weight in the mid-140s, maybe 10 pounds or so into the overweight
category. Does she have a weight problem, one that might even
shorten her life?
To many in the field, the answer
is clear.
"Over 99 percent of experts throughout
the world are convinced by overwhelming data that being overweight
is a huge problem indeed for the majority of the world," says
Dr. Philip James, chairman of the International Obesity Task Force
in London.
But as co-director of the Center
for Weight and Health at the University of California at Berkeley,
Ikeda has a professional, though somewhat contrarian, opinion:
Not likely.
"She's very physically fit," says
Ikeda. "She goes to Curves everyday after work. To look at her,
you would say, 'Here is someone who is not even slightly chubby.'"
Ikeda has a weight problem of her
own. Her BMI is 33, which makes her officially obese. Does that
bother her? "Not really," she said. "What matters is my metabolic
fitness."
Some in the world of diet and health
and as James says, they are a minority feel too
much is made of the lower end of the BMI scale, that perhaps even
the entire category called overweight causes much anxiety for
nothing.
"This is so ludicrous," says Ikeda.
"Why are we doing this to ourselves? I think it has a lot to do
with the dieting and pharmaceutical industry and the pressure
to medicate every condition."
"A completely phony category" is
what University of Colorado attorney Paul Campos calls overweight.
He is author of "The Obesity Myth" and argues that the real health
problem is too little exercise, not too much weight.
"There is no basis in the medical
literature to draw the conclusion that having a BMI between 25
and 29 an is an independent health risk," he says. "It is quite
preposterous to make that claim."
Such out-of-step pronouncements
are fighting words in the field of nutrition and health, where
many consider the evils of fat to be beyond question.
Former New England Journal of Medicine
Editor Jerome Kassirer remembers the indignation six years ago
when he wrote a skeptical editorial calling the data linking weight
and ill health "limited, fragmentary and often ambiguous."
"We got flack from just about everybody
except the fatties," he remembers, although he hasn't seen anything
since to change his mind.
One of the most persistent doubters
is Steven Blair of the Cooper Aerobics Center in Dallas. His research
buttresses the idea that fitness is more important than fatness.
Following 25,000 Cooper patients
for eight years, he found that it is better to be fit and fat
than skinny and sedentary. In fact, overweight people who have
good stamina on a treadmill test live just as long as equally
fit people who are not overweight.
"If you look at people in the overweight
category, many have none of the conventional risk factors, like
elevated blood pressure and cholesterol," says Blair. "Should
they be stigmatized and treated? For what?"
Many obesity experts concede Blair
has a point: People who are overweight but fit probably do escape
many of the consequences of their size. But they often add: So
what?
"It may be true, but the fact is,
overweight people are not fit," says Dr. Xavier Pi-Sunyer, head
of obesity research at St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center in
New York City. "The average American is incredibly sedentary."
Not always, says Blair. About half
of the oversize people who get physical exams at Cooper in fact
are physically fit, based on their treadmill tests. While hardly
a random sample these people are overwhelmingly white,
educated and well off Blair contends plenty of overweight
Americans are just like him.
"I'm a short fat guy," says Blair,
whose BMI is about 32. "Would I rather be a short thin guy? Sure.
But I'm not. I run everyday and eat a healthy diet and do what
I can."
Until a few years ago, government
agencies generally agreed that concern about weight begins when
a man's BMI hits 28 and a woman's 27. That's 152 pounds for a
5-foot-3 female. But in 1997, the World Health Organization adopted
a new standard. BMIs between 25 and 29.9 were now "preobese."
The next year, an expert committee
of the U.S. National Institutes of Health came to the same conclusion
and called the new category "overweight." Suddenly an extra 35
million Americans were judged to have weight problems.
"We felt it makes sense that if
someone's BMI is between 25 and 30, they should not gain more
weight," says Pi-Sunyer, who headed the U.S. committee. "We don't
feel those millions of people should be trying desperately to
lose weight. At a BMI of 30, the risk for both disease and early
mortality is so great that people should begin to lose weight."
The 25 cutoff was chosen, he said,
because of evidence that the risk of diabetes, high blood pressure
and high cholesterol all seem to increase around that point.
The studies backing this up are
mostly reviews of large population groups that look for ties between
increasing weight and the risk of various diseases and death.
The individual studies may have flaws, but taken together, many
contend they draw a convincing picture of weight being on a continuum
from good health to ill.
"Some say it's all made up, that
there's no risk to being moderately overweight," says Dr. Lawrence
J. Cheskin, director of the Johns Hopkins Weight Management Center.
"But there is more and more data to show a very definite dose
effect. The heavier you are, the greater your risk."
Some believe the ideal body weight
is actually around a BMI of 20 or 21, or a willowy 115 pounds
for that 5-foot-3 woman. Others put it closer to 24 or 25. "Everybody
agrees that if your BMI is 28, you are at increased risk," says
Dr. Steven Heymsfield of St. Luke's-Roosevelt.
This view is backed by studies
showing mortality inching up gradually when BMIs reach the high
20s, then climbing more sharply through the 30s and beyond.
One of the most recent, published
last year in the Journal of the American Medical Association,
concludes that white men and women lose about an average year
of life if their BMIs top 26 or 27 by the time they reach middle
age. However, for reasons that are not easy to explain, this may
not be true for blacks. They actually seem to live a year or so
longer if overweight but not obese.
While some question the scientific
rigor of the mortality estimates, there is less disagreement that
common health problems increase among people who are overweight
but still below the obesity threshold of a BMI of 30.
For instance, a woman with a BMI
of 26 is twice as likely as one who is 21 to develop coronary
heart disease. She is twice as likely to get high blood pressure.
And she is eight times as likely to get diabetes. Of course, a
very thin woman has only a tiny risk of these diseases, so a risk
that is double or triple may still be small.
Nevertheless, national health surveys
show that about a quarter of people who are overweight but not
obese have metabolic syndrome, a particularly worrisome combination
of high blood sugar, high blood pressure, low HDL and high triglycerides.
Diabetes is an especially important
concern, even for those nowhere near rotund. In fact, the ideal
size for avoiding this disease appears to be around a BMI of 22.
The risk goes up 25 percent with each unit of BMI after that,
and it appears to be especially great for those with pot bellies,
even small ones.
Of course, just because surveys
of thousands of people show a clear link between rising BMIs and
bad health doesn't mean that any particular individual is in trouble
with a BMI that hits 25. Many lucky people carry their extra pounds
with no ill effect, especially if they have normal blood sugar,
healthy blood pressure and no worrisome cholesterol signs.
Many experts contend the biggest
hazard of being overweight is what almost inevitably comes next.
"Fat people get fatter," says Dr.
Peter McCullough, head of the weight control center at Beaumont
Hospital in suburban Detroit. "It is very clear that those who
are overweight will become obese over time. People need to understand
they have to get this under control."
BMI calculator:
http://www.preventdisease.com/healthtools/articles/bmi.html
Overweight statistics: http://www.niddk.nih.gov/health/nutrit/pubs/statobes.htm
BMI chart:
http://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/guidelines/obesity/bmi_tbl.htm
Reference
Source 102
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