Washington – Know Your BMI: Docs Urged To Screen For Obesity

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    Washington – Chances are you know your blood pressure. What about your BMI?

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    Body mass index signals if you’re overweight, obese or just right considering your height. Some doctors have begun calling it a vital sign, as crucial to monitor as blood pressure.

    But apparently not enough doctors check: A government panel renewed a call Monday for every adult to be screened for obesity during checkups, suggesting more physicians should be routinely calculating their patients’ BMIs.

    And when someone crosses the line into obesity, the doctor needs to do more than mention a diet. It’s time to refer those patients for intensive nutrition-and-fitness help, say the guidelines issued by the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force.

    Don’t assume your weight’s OK if the doctor doesn’t bring it up.

    Patients “should be asking what their BMI is, and tracking that over time,” says task force member Dr. David Grossman, medical director for preventive care at the Group Health Cooperative in Seattle.

    By the numbers: A normal BMI is less than 25. Obesity begins at 30. In between is considered overweight. To calculate yours: http://www.nhlbisupport.com/bmi/.

    The advice sounds like a no-brainer, considering the national anxiety about our growing waistlines. Two-thirds of adults are either overweight or obese. Some 17 percent of children and teens are obese, on the road to diabetes, heart disease and other ailments before they’re even grown.

    The task force has recommended adult obesity screening previously, and similar guidelines urge tracking whether youngsters are putting on too many pounds.

    Yet BMI remains a mystery for many people. A 2010 survey of members of the American Academy of Family Physicians found up to 40 percent of those primary care doctors were computing their patients’ BMIs. Surveys show only about a third of obese patients recall their doctor counseling them about weight loss, even though people whose doctors discuss the problem are more likely to do something about it.

    Doctors can struggle with the pounds, too, and Johns Hopkins University researchers recently reported that overweight physicians were less likely than skinnier ones to advise their patients about weight loss.

    Why the reluctance? One reason: Few doctors are trained to treat obesity, they’re discouraged by yo-yo dieting but they don’t know what to advise, says Dr. Glen Stream, president of the physicians’ group. His Spokane, Wash., practice uses electronic medical records that automatically calculate BMI when a patient’s height and weight is entered.

    “Our American culture is always looking for an easy fix, a pill for every problem,” Stream says. “The updated recommendation is important because it makes clear exactly what doctors should do to help.”

    In Monday’s Annals of Internal Medicine, the task force concluded high-intensity behavioral interventions are the best non-surgical advice for the obese, citing insufficient evidence about lasting effects from weight-loss medications.

    The task force’s Grossman says a good program:

    —Includes 12 to 26 face-to-face meetings over a year, most in the first few months.

    —Makes patients set realistic weight-loss goals. Losing just 5 percent of your initial weight — 10 pounds for a 200-pound person — can significantly improve health.

    —Analyzes what blocks each patient from reaching those goals. Do they eat high-calorie comfort foods to deal with depression? Spend too much time at a desk job?

    —Tailors ways to help people integrate physical activity into their daily routine.

    —Requires self-monitoring, such as a food diary or a pedometer to track activity.

    Last year, Medicare started paying primary care doctors for obesity screening and weight-loss counseling for seniors for a year, including weekly meetings for the first month.

    But many insurance companies don’t pay for all the suggested interventions, and comprehensive programs aren’t available everywhere, says Dr. Scott Kahan of George Washington University and the STOP Obesity Alliance. He runs a clinic that provides a medical, psychological and nutritional evaluation before tailoring a plan. In other programs, primary care doctors may offer some counseling and send patients to nutritionists or other specialists for extra help.

    Another problem: “Doctors tend to shoo away people who have obesity. They say, ‘Don’t come back to me and tell me your back hurts or you have acid reflux or high cholesterol until you will do something about it,'” laments Kahan, who is teaching medical school students to motivate patients.

    What about the overweight? The task force said more study is needed on how best to help them.

    But in Reno, Nev., Dr. Andy Pasternak calculates BMI for every patient at his family medicine practice — and particularly targets the overweight in their 40s and younger for fitness counseling. He says if they wait until they’re heavier or older to get active, arthritis exacerbated by the pounds will be another barrier.

    Patients seldom know what their BMI should be, but “at least twice a day people say, ‘What should be my optimal weight?'” Pasternak says.

    He thinks saying to lose 60 pounds is too discouraging: “What I try to get them to focus on is: How much are you working out? How many servings of vegetables do you get a day?”

    ___

    BMI calculator: http://www.nhlbisupport.com/bmi


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    6 Comments
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    shlomogabai
    shlomogabai
    11 years ago

    im exempt! i drink 2 gallons DIET coke! and its not my fault that im overweight! it’s my grandmothers genes! (sure from my hubbys side.)

    Geulah
    Geulah
    11 years ago

    BMI is inaccurate, unless you are doing the water displacement version. A bodybuilder’s BMI would make him obese based on present calculation methods of height to weight ratio. A more effective obesity test for the home user, besides the pinch a inch, is the waist to hips ratio method.

    Stickpick
    Stickpick
    11 years ago

    Interesting to note, just last nite I randomly checked my BMI it stated as obese but I so don’t look or feel it. I’m very energetic not fat at all. People will laugh when they hear that I’m considered obese on the BMI calculator.
    wondering how accurate it is.

    Avreich1
    Avreich1
    11 years ago

    Reference: BMI

    I work as an anesthesiologist here in Israel and I saw a Charedi patient this morning for a pre-operative examination. When I read through his notes before he came into my office I noted his age (48), his height (174 cm), his weight (110 kg) and his BMI, which my nurse had obligingly calculated: 36.3, which falls into the category of “obese”. Aha, I thought: noch a middle-aged Yerushalmi kugel and cholent chomper!.

    When the man came in I saw how wrong depending on BMI alone is. He was covered in muscle and was, perhaps, one of the best examples of HaShem’s wonderful works I have ever seen in my entire career. Any “excess weight” he was carrying was NOT fat.

    The moral of my tale today: neither health professionals nor their patients should *ever* depend on BMI calculations alone for assessing obesity.

    (On an entirely different matter, Geulah #3 has now been “vindicated”; at last he/she and I are in complete agreement on *something* today!)