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When It Comes to Health, Fitness Beats BMI and Body Composition, Research Suggests

Although using body mass index (BMI) is no longer the end all, be all as an indicator of your health, we still tend to look at general body composition as a visual way to measure our overall fitness.

However, new research published in the British Journal of Sports Medicine suggests there might be a better way to measure a person’s overall health and susceptibility to disease than either BMI or body composition: Your VO2 max.

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What Is VO2 Max?

A VO2 max test measures how much oxygen a person can utilize during intense or maximal exercise. It is considered an effective way to measure a person’s aerobic endurance and overall cardiovascular fitness.

The Details

The research looked at data from 20 studies that included close to 400,000 people where cardiovascular fitness was compared to BMI. It analyzed both a person’s risk of cardiovascular disease and overall risk of mortality.

The researchers, led by Siddhartha Angadi, an associate professor in the Department of Kinesiology at the University of Virginia, surmised that, from a health perspective, being unfit is then a much greater health risk than carrying extra weight. 

Worth Noting: Two months ago, we wrote about another piece of research with a similar result.

The Big Picture

While the link between exercise and health has long been established, we still tend to use markers like BMI and body composition rather than fitness tests to measure health.  

But if this study — and the Nature Metabolism study from September 2024 — hold merit, then it’s about time we start considering a person’s fitness level in the bigger picture health equation. 

Because even though they say you can’t outrun a bad diet, if you continue to exercise and stay fit, you actually…maybe…sort of…can.

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Credit: @scaled_nation / Instagram

The post When It Comes to Health, Fitness Beats BMI and Body Composition, Research Suggests appeared first on BarBend.

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