I am keeping my BMI a secret :) Is Jean-Marc very muscular?? Since
muscle weighs more than fat per unit area, a muscular person will have a
higher BMI even though they are in otherwise fine shape. It amazes me to
hear of football players who are 5 feet 9 inches tall (my height) and
weigh 190 pounds, yet do not look overweight. On the various posts
relating weight to longevity, it is important to make sure smoking is
statistically removed from the analysis, which was not done in the old
studies. There is much very recent evidence showing not just the harmful
effects of overweight, but the positive benefits of being underweight.
An American Psychologist article from a year or two back summarized some
of this work. Will find reference later .. off to exam.

============================================
John W. Kulig
Professor of Psychology
Plymouth State College
Plymouth NH 03264
============================================
"Nothing is more American, nothing is more patriotic than speaking out,
questioning authority and holding your leaders accountable" General
Welsey K. Clark, 24 September 2003.

> -----Original Message-----
> From: Paul Brandon [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Thursday, November 20, 2003 7:32 PM
> To: Teaching in the Psychological Sciences
> Subject: Re: BMI Scale
> 
> At 3:13 PM -0500 11/20/03, Stephen Black wrote:
> >On 20 Nov 2003, Ken Steele wrote, in response to a query from Jean-
> >Marc Perreault about the BMI measure of obesity::
> >
> >>  A year or so back, I computed the BMI for myself and several
members
> >>  of the ASU psychology department.  All were physically active
> >>  (runners, bicyclists) and in good shape.  All of us were
borderline
> >>  obese according to the BMI rules at that time.  So I have been
wary of
> >  > that measure ever since.
> >
> >One last point. The data does show that serious obesity (say around
> >35-40) is definitely a health risk. But as far as I know, there is no
> >study which has demonstrated that if you reduce, you live longer,
> 
> The old line is "life just _seems_ longer".
> Actually, I think that there's data showing that the exercising
> overweight live longer than the sedentary of ideal weight.  Ken
> Steele should appreciate that.
> (BTW, since self disclosure seems to be the order of the day -- my
> own BMI hovers at the upper border of overweight but not obese).
> --
> * PAUL K. BRANDON                     [EMAIL PROTECTED] *
> * Psychology Department                        507-389-6217 *
> * 23 Armstrong Hall     Minnesota State University, Mankato *
> *    http://www.mankato.msus.edu/dept/psych/welcome.html    *
> 
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