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as of November 7, 2009
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Health Corner

America's Healthiest TV Show

Sundays airing onLifetime 9:30 am ET · 8:30 am CT

A Pennsylvania couple consult with the authors of the "Great Life Make Over", and experience a healthy renaissance in their middle years. Dr. Amir Steinberg from Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles had Hodgkin lymphoma in his teens, and his...

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It's the ultimate Hollywood party with a purpose. Health Corner takes you to the "Race to Erase MS" to talk with its founders, designer Tommy Hilfiger and philanthropist Nancy Davis. Learn how the $30 million they have raised is helping to find a...

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Marie Osmond: Health Story

She's a member of one of America's most famous families and she wears a lot of hats. Singer, songwriter, entertainer, entrepreneur and a busy mother of eight, Marie Osmond is the perfect person to talk about balance. "Well, I don't know that my...

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Health Tools & Resources

Body Mass Index Calculator

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About the Body Mass Index

BMI is a ratio of your weight to your height.

Nearly all adults with a high BMI have extra body fat; those with a low BMI often have too little body fat.

A normal BMI for kids and teens depends on age, and is not the same for adults over age 18.

Diagnostic Status and Risk According to Body Mass Index (BMI).*
For adults over age 18.
Status BMI Category
(kg/m2)
Risk of developing
health problems**
Underweight <18.5 Increased
Normal Weight 18.5 - 24.9 Least
Overweight 25.0 - 29.9 Increased
Obese Class I 30.0 - 34.9 High
Obese Class II 35.0 - 39.9 Very high
Obese Class III ≥40.0 Extremely high

*Note: Exceptions: For persons 65 years and older the 'normal' range may begin slightly above BMI 18.5 and extend into the 'overweight' range; very muscular athletes and body builders often have high BMIs and are not overfat; children and teens, who need an age appropriate scale; and pregnant and lactating women.

**If your risk is increased, speak with your doctor about having your cholesterol, triglycerides, blood sugar and blood pressure levels as part of a full cardiovascular and diabetes screen.

Adapted from: World Health Organization. (2000). Obesity: Preventing and Managing the Global Epidemic: Report of a WHO Consultation on Obesity. Geneva: WHO, page 9

Waist-to-Hip Ratio (WHR) Calculator

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Hips:
 

How to Measure Your Waist and Hips

  • Waist:
    1. Stand.
    2. Remove your shirt and loosen your belt.
    3. Feel for the bottom of the rib cage and the top of the hip bone.
    4. Maneuver the tape against your skin to the narrowest natural place. This is usually mid-way between the top of your hip bone and the bottom of the rib cage, not your belly button.
    5. Relax your stomach.
    6. Pull the tape so it is horizontal, and flat against your skin. That is your waist measurement.

  • Hips:
    1. Stand.
    2. Loosen your belt.
    3. Maneuver the tape against your skin so it is on top of each hip bone.
    4. Make sure it is level.
    5. Pull the tape so it is flat against your skin.  That is your hip measurement.

How to Interpret Your Waist-to-Hip Ratio (WHR)

Your waist-to-hip ratio should be below 0.8 for a woman and below 1.0 for a man.
  • Your WHR measures how your body fat is distributed.
  • WHR is a better predictor of calcification of the arteries than your waist measurement or BMI.
  • WHR predicts heart disease and hardening of the arteries before they cause symptoms, better than how much you weigh or what your waist is.
Your waist should be less than 35 inches (88 cm) for a woman, and less than 40 inches (102 cm) for a man.
  • Your waist measurement tells you how much abdominal fat—beneath the surface—you have.
  • Too much fat beneath the surface of your waist is an active, hormone-producing organ in the body.
  • Your risk of diabetes, heart disease and high blood pressure are greater as these measurements rise.

Reference:
The Association of Differing Measures of Overweight and Obesity With Prevalent Atherosclerosis. J Am Coll Cardiol, 2007; 50:752-759, WHR: http://content.onlinejacc.org/cgi/content/abstract/j.jacc.2007.04.066v1

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