"Being overweight not linked to dying early, study says, but questions remain | CNN"

https://lemmy.world/post/1077324

"Being overweight not linked to dying early, study says, but questions remain | CNN" - Lemmy.world

“when considered separately from other health issues” like all the detrimental byproducts of being morbidly obese? lol, yes, a number can’t hurt you, but being overweight has, can, and will. ffs.

I think what most people call overweight is obese, so clinically overweight might be ok?

Reading through the article it sounds like not a great study, not asking enough questions and not tracking key information, such as cause of death.

Sounds like one of those things where people are going to headline what they want out of it and use it to champion their bias. “Being overweight doesn’t kill you, yay!” Nah, it’s way more complicated than that. People with cancer and other diseases often lose weight, a lot of it, and studies like this don’t do a good job of tracking this info.

After all, it’s not the cancer that kills you - it’s just the multi-organ failure.

I thought it was pretty well-known that BMI is a bullshit metric.

A short, thin, but bulky person can have an obese BMI because it doesn’t take into account fat percentage or muscle mass. It’s doesn’t account for diet quality and it doesn’t account for fitness.

A ratio of weight to height tells you basically nothing about your health.

It’s generally considered bullshit. But a large number of people cling to it, even when you point out glaring flaws like every power lifter is considered dangerously overweight.
The Fediverse needs an r/fatlogic analog, made entirely of stretchy materials of course, where this kind of Fat Acceptance garbage can be posted. It's a special flavor of mildlyinfuriating, Now with 200% of the calories, but don't worry, it's healthy ... of course it is!
Key passage:
“The real message of this study is that overweight as defined by BMI is a poor indicator of mortality risk, and that BMI in general is a poor indicator of health risk and should be supplemented with information such as waist circumference, other measures of adiposity (fat), and weight trajectory,” said study first author Dr. Aayush Visaria, an internal medicine resident physician at the Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School in New Brunswick, New Jersey.