iheartscience
Super_Ideal_Rock
- Joined
- Jan 1, 2007
- Messages
- 12,111
missy|1332885499|3157625 said:thing2of2|1332885440|3157622 said:missy|1332885136|3157616 said:thing2of2|1332884979|3157614 said:kenny|1332884866|3157610 said:thing2of2|1332883940|3157599 said:kenny|1332883544|3157588 said:Quibbling over what criteria or number is used to draw the line misses the point.
Women are dying.
Solutions are needed.
The fashion industry carries a lot of blame for publishing zillions of images of gaunt women as the ideal of beauty.
The fashion industry is the last entity I'd blame for the myriad of health problems women face.
This thread is not about the myriad.
It's about the two mentioned in the OP, bulimia and anorexia.
Gee, folks.
I think this is a wonder thing.
Why are people all upset?
I'm not all upset, I just really dislike the classification of anyone with a BMI under 18.5 as "dangerously skinny." Mainly because it's not true.
ETA not to mention that having a BMI below 18.5 does not mean you are bulimic or anorexic. Thin does not = eating disorder.
But it sorta is Thing. As a generalization that is. Doesn't mean you were or are too skinny. Just means that for the most part people who weigh under a certain amount at a certain height are too thin.
But statistically speaking it's actually more dangerous to have a high BMI. No generalizations needed.
But that wasn't your question to me was it? You asked if there were any studies indicating low BMI to be unhealthy.![]()
Right, but the research you linked to didn't actually focus on whether most people with a low BMI are unhealthy, which is what you stated. So I used the articles about high BMI data to draw my conclusions, and the only way to do that was to compare low BMI to high BMI.