Monday, November 23, 2009

Health

On Fitness Blog by U.S. News & World Report

You're Thin—and Too Fat

April 01, 2008 04:53 PM ET | Katherine Hobson | Permanent Link | Print

Reader Comments

As if this is a new revelation

People are not particularly clever relying on a BMI alone; obviously good health requires physical fitness, not a wasp waist.

You' re thin -- and too fat

Really good article. Finally someone is really able to speak/tell the benifit of healthy eating and exercise.

As a physician I agree with this change in emphasis. Worth emphasizing however, is the flipside - the aim of lifestyle changes such as a healthy food intake (ie not dieting) and exercise should be to increase the proportion of lean body mass (ie muscle mass). People who are 'dieting' often skip meals, eschew resistance training in favor of only doing aerobic workouts, and consequently are in a vicious cycle of slow metabolism, loss of muscle mass and difficulty mobilising fat stores - leading to disillusionment and quitting their program. Increasing muscle mass increases basal metabolic rate (therefore burning more energy when you are NOT in the gym), aids fat loss and improves cardiovascular health. The actual number on the weighing scale is less important than what creates it. Swapping 10lbs of fat for 10lbs of muscle while staying the same weight can have a major health impact.

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About On Fitness

Senior Writer Katherine Hobson writes about keeping your body fit and your diet healthy—and what those phrases actually mean, according to science. A longtime endurance athlete, she enjoys both training and Nutella in moderation. Ask her your burning exercise and nutrition questions at onfitness@usnews.com. Follow Katherine on Twitter at twitter.com/katherinehobson.

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