Fat and healthy? Study finds slim isn't always superior

August 15, 2011 in Health

A study out of York University has some refreshing news: Being fat can actually be good for you.

Published today in the journal Applied Physiology, Nutrition and Metabolism, the study finds that obese people who are otherwise healthy live just as long as their slim counterparts, and are less likely to die of cardiovascular causes.

"Our findings challenge the idea that all need to lose weight," says lead author Jennifer Kuk, assistant professor in York's School of Kinesiology & Health Science, Faculty of Health. "Moreover, it's possible that trying – and failing – to lose weight may be more detrimental than simply staying at an elevated and engaging in a healthy lifestyle that includes physical activity and a balanced diet with plenty of fruits and vegetables," she says.

Kuk's team looked at 6,000 obese Americans over a 16-year span, comparing their mortality risk with that of lean individuals.

They found that obese individuals who had no (or only mild) physical, psychological or physiological impairments had a higher body weight in early adulthood, were happier with this higher body weight, and had attempted to lose weight less frequently during their lives. However, these individuals were also more likely to be physically active and consume a healthy diet.

Researchers used a newly-developed grading tool, the Edmonton Obesity Staging System (EOSS), which has been found to be more accurate than body mass index (BMI) for identifying who should attempt to lose weight. Developed by University of Alberta researchers, it is modelled on staging systems that classify the extent and severity of other diseases such as cancer, mental illness and heart disease. It offers five stages of obesity based on both traditional physical measurements such as BMI and waist-to-hip ratio, plus clinical measurements that reflect medical conditions often caused or aggravated by obesity (such as diabetes, hypertension and heart disease).

Kuk stresses that in order to determine whether or not they should , individuals should see a physician to be evaluated using the EOSS criteria.

More information: "Edmonton Obesity Staging System: Association with Weight History and Mortality Risk," Applied Physiology, Nutrition and Metabolism.

Provided by New York University search and more info website

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Birthmark
Aug 15, 2011

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I've said before, there are obese people who are healthy. However, the majority of obese people tend to get their fat from places like McDonalds, packaged and processed food, meat, twinkies, I could go on.
Moebius
Aug 15, 2011

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Someone who is carrying 50 lbs of fat but never gains more and eats healthy shouldn't necessarily be unhealthy. The problem is that many overweight people keep piling on more weight over time. And what you eat, as Birthmark said, is probably more of a health indicator than just weight. But don't take this article to mean you can eat healthy, keep gaining weight and expect to stay healthy and live to be 100. You are never going to see them tear down a wall to remove a 100 year old person from a room with a crane.
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