Posted on 08/08/2006 7:00:28 AM PDT by jdm
Aug. 7, 2006 Last week President Bush underwent his annual physical. It revealed he was in pretty good health, except for one thing. According to his body mass index, he's overweight.
His BMI was 26, putting him in the lower range of the overweight category. He weighs 196 pounds, meaning he has gained 5 pounds since last year and his percentage of body fat has increased to 16.8 percent, which is, overall, pretty good for a man who just turned 60. (To calculate your BMI, go here).
Still, the appropriate body weight range is 157 to 192 pounds for a 5-foot, 11-inch man. Is there cause for alarm? Should the president go on a diet?
Possibly, dietitians say.
"When you're 60 and your BMI is 26, it's a risk," says dietitian Cathy Nonas, a spokeswoman for the American Dietetic Association. "As you get older, you are more prone to other ailments diabetes, arthritis and cardiovascular disease. It is helpful to not add another BMI point each year."
The notion that everyone gains weight as they age is not an excuse, say health care professionals.
"I don't know if I would say he's overweight, but if you look at the trend, increasing body weight is not a good pattern," says Leslie Bonci, director of Sports Nutrition at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center. "This weight gain trend is important as we get older."
While some experts have voiced concern over the president's weight, others say he has nothing to worry about. And one leading nutrition researcher believes BMI alone does not provide enough information to make a decision.
"In men, BMI is particularly misleading because of muscle mass. I would like to know the president's waist circumference. It appears the president is pretty healthy. However, if he's beginning a trend of gaining 5 pounds a year, that is not a good thing," says Barbara Rolls, head of nutritional sciences at Penn State University.
And J. Larry Durstine, president of the American College of Sports Medicine, says he believes the president should be recognized as a leader in maintaining good health.
"If 60 percent of Americans had a BMI of 26 or less, we would have a healthier population," he says.
So why is Bush technically overweight?
Body mass index is the ratio of a person's weight to height and is meant to indicate how likely someone will develop an illness, such as heart disease, because of his or her weight. A BMI of less than 25 has a low risk. A BMI between 26 and 29.99 is considered overweight and anything higher than 30 is obese and poses a high risk. An individual with a BMI under 19 may be at risk for osteoporosis and, potentially, malnutrition.
However, there is controversy with using this formula, as it may overestimate risk or inaccurately put someone in an overweight or obese category, especially men.
Although there are more precise ways of determining a person's percentage of body fat, BMI is perhaps the easiest and quickest measurement for the general population. Still, a BMI should always be taken into account with other measurements and tests, experts say.
"BMI cutoffs are not absolute about health risks," says Kelly D. Brownell, director of the Rudd Center for Food Policy and Obesity at Yale University.
In addition, "BMI is one thing in a constellation of risk factors that should be considered for cardiovascular disease, diabetes and metabolic syndrome," says Barry A. Franklin, director of Cardiac Rehabilitation and Exercise Laboratories at William Beaumont Hospital. "I would not be upset by a BMI of 26 and would consider other factors to gauge global health, including fitness, blood pressure, lipids. In this case, the president's values are all stellar."
Bush is not the only one to have a BMI that seems incorrect or perhaps a bit unfair. In his prime, as Mr. Universe, Arnold Schwarzenneger's BMI was 33. Jack LaLanne, the fitness guru, had a BMI of 26.1 when he turned 90.
The experts agree that because of muscle mass, BMIs can put some men in the obese category. However, some larger athletes are not only made up of extra muscle mass some, such as football linebackers, have higher body fat levels as well.
One of the world's most famous athletes, Shaquille O'Neal, has struggled to keep his BMI low. At one point, the 7-foot-one Miami Heat teammate held the NBA's highest BMI at 31.6, according to an AP analysis. While he has lost some weight recently, Miami Heat officials refused to comment on his current status.
So, I guess that you are suffering from furniture disease. Your chester has fallen into your drawers.!!!!!!
No, no...the JOGGING one!
The Legacy Media simply cannot die fast enough...
You have got to be kidding! Of all the things to pick on GWB for, his physical fitness???
No.
This article actually serves as an illustration of just how ridiculous BMI is as a standard. BMI doesn't distinguish between lean muscle mass and greasy blubber . . . mass is mass is mass. BMI would have us believe that an average NFL cornerback is in terrible "shape."
BAck when I was in better shape, we had a health fair at my place of work. My BMI came in at 30! The nice ladies there tried to tell me that I was grossly overweight, all the bad health implications, yadda, yadda. I kindly explained to them, as I removed my shirt, that I was something of an amateur bodybuilder, and at 8% bodyfat, I didn't need to worry. They heartily agreed.
President Bush is in FANTASTIC shape. He is the Teddy Roosevelt of our time.
ROFL! W has a resting heart rate of 45 ... if these writers had an ounce of integrity (which, of course, they don't) they'd write a bit about how he's healthier than 98% of the public, and maybe thereby encourage people to follow his example.
Yep, W's other statistics show that he is in incredibly good physical condtion.
I just did mine...27.2; it says I'm overwieght....
I usually swim at least a mile then run three and a half miles three-to-four days a week, run 3 miles then lift weights two more days a week and my "easy" days I jog four miles...
Obviously I must increase the amount of exercise I do!!
My BMI is around 29, I'm 209 and 5'11'. I do consider myself to be overweight, but my friends tell me that I'm not. And I'm certainly not as overweight as the BMI would suggest. It's an arbitrary tool that does not take into account that every person's chemistry and metabolism is quite different.
Bingo...I am naturally around 6-2/207....when I get into heavy wieght lifting regiments my weight will go as high as 217...
Agreed. It doesn't take into consideration body type or the kind of tissue adding the weight.
I mean anyone with a husky build will show up as overweight because of the dumb nature of the chart. I am listed as second level overweight but I move pianos for a living and have a rather muscular build.
And furthermore, a little extra girth isn't all that bad.
I agree, they do not take into account body frame type or muscle mass.
You know, Al Gore just sweats way too much for a white person; we just can't have that in a president.
This stupid BMI is so misleading as to be considered pure propaganda. I have had my body fat percentage and my blood chemistry analyzed and come up excellent. According to the BMI calculator, I am borderline obese.
There are way too many people out there in this country who are really fat and this BS of calling everyone either "obese" or "borderline obese" unless they are anorexic just mucks up the real picture.
Well I life weights for fun, although I don't run.
While my waist ain't exactly that of an NFL player, it isn't that of a BASEBALL player either :)
Ha ha! well seriously you have to be a little careful with that kind of feedback.
And I can't type...
I don't life weights...
I tend to LIFT them though :)
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