Abstract :
While body fat is the most accurate measure of obesity, its measurement requires special equipment that
can be costly and time consuming to operate. Attention has thus typically focused on the easier to calculate
body mass index (BMI). However, the ability of BMI to accurately identify obesity has been increasingly
questioned. This paper focuses attention on whether more general body mass indices are appropriate
measures of body fat. Using a data set of body fat, height, and weight measurements, general models are
estimated which nest a wide variety of weight–height indices as special cases. In the absence of a race and
gender categorisation, the conventional BMI was found to be the appropriate index with which to predict
body fat. When such a categorisation was made, however, the BMI was never selected as the appropriate
index. In general, predicted female body fat was some 10 kg higher than that of a male of identical build
and predicted % body fat was over 11 percentage points higher, but age effects were smaller for females.
Considerable racial differences in predicted body fat were found for males, but such differences were less
marked for females. The implications of this finding for interpreting recent research on the effect of obesity
on health, society, and economic factors are considered.
Keywords :
height–weight indices , body fat , BMI , obesity