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People say that the BMI scale is bogus. How true is that, health experts?
(www.medicalnewstoday.com)
Discussion community about how weight is socialized, what weights are scientifically healthy, and what fitness really looks like for all genders.
BMI is used two ways; as a population tool to compare groups of people, and as a screening tool for indviduals to see if more detailed tests need to be run. I've given other examples of screening tests here - the sit/stand test and an alcohol screener. None of these form the basis of clinical recommendations. A positive finding is cause to ask further questions. "Oh you're very tall ok BMI doesn't work well then." Or "Oh you're muscular, that's fine".
As a personal example I was a serious runner at one point in my life and my resting heart rate slipped below 40 at the doctor's office. It set off an alarm. I confirmed that I ran about 70 miles a week and we all had a laugh about it.
The fact that you know some edge cases doesn't invalidate the measure. And let me point out that people have an amazingly distorted view of normal now. A 6'0" man weighing 225 lbs is obese. 225 seems like a typical weight but from a historical view that is very large. The fact that most of the North American population is overweight or obese and they don't like to hear that.