In their study of deaths associated with underweight, overweight, and obesity, Dr Flegal and colleagues1 conclude that excess mortality due to obesity and overweight is much lower than previously reported. We believe that their analysis is flawed and misleading. A major challenge in such studies is that low weight is often due to underlying chronic disease, which may exist for many years before death. Thus, lean persons are a mix of smokers, healthy active persons, and those with chronic illness (due to the direct effects of disease on weight and sometimes purposeful weight loss motivated by diagnosis of a serious illness). Their analysis does not successfully disentangle this diverse group.http://jama.ama-assn.org/content/294/5/551.2.extra...
INTRODUCTION: Findings regarding the association between overweight and all-cause mortality range fr...
Background: The relative contributions of a low and high body mass index (BMI [weight in kilograms d...
BACKGROUND: The relative contributions of a low and high body mass index (BMI [weight in kilograms d...
There is indisputable evidence from epidemiologic and clinical studies that being overweight and obe...
WIDELY DIVERGENT ESTIMATES of the impact ofoverweight and obesity on mortality have been published i...
Recent investigations of the relation of mortality to weight have involved more than 4 million insur...
R01 DK078106/DK/NIDDK NIH HHS/United StatesUL1 TR000124/TR/NCATS NIH HHS/United States2014-03-01T00:...
Background Obesity, defined by a body-mass index (BMI) (the weight in kilograms divided by the squar...
It is still debatable whether overweight has protective or detrimental effects on survival. The focu...
We read with interest in the article by Arnlov et al1 that middle-aged men defined as overweight and...
Obese persons (those with a body mass index [BMI] ≥30 kg/m2) tend to underestimate their weight, lea...
The link between obesity and increased risk of mortality is well established. However, those who are...
BMI; overweight; mortality; epidemiologic methods; survival; obesity paradox A large number of gener...
mated excess all-cause mortality as-sociated with underweight, over-weight, and obesity in the Unite...
The relationship between BMI and relative mortality risk is J-or U-shaped; both a low and a high BMI...
INTRODUCTION: Findings regarding the association between overweight and all-cause mortality range fr...
Background: The relative contributions of a low and high body mass index (BMI [weight in kilograms d...
BACKGROUND: The relative contributions of a low and high body mass index (BMI [weight in kilograms d...
There is indisputable evidence from epidemiologic and clinical studies that being overweight and obe...
WIDELY DIVERGENT ESTIMATES of the impact ofoverweight and obesity on mortality have been published i...
Recent investigations of the relation of mortality to weight have involved more than 4 million insur...
R01 DK078106/DK/NIDDK NIH HHS/United StatesUL1 TR000124/TR/NCATS NIH HHS/United States2014-03-01T00:...
Background Obesity, defined by a body-mass index (BMI) (the weight in kilograms divided by the squar...
It is still debatable whether overweight has protective or detrimental effects on survival. The focu...
We read with interest in the article by Arnlov et al1 that middle-aged men defined as overweight and...
Obese persons (those with a body mass index [BMI] ≥30 kg/m2) tend to underestimate their weight, lea...
The link between obesity and increased risk of mortality is well established. However, those who are...
BMI; overweight; mortality; epidemiologic methods; survival; obesity paradox A large number of gener...
mated excess all-cause mortality as-sociated with underweight, over-weight, and obesity in the Unite...
The relationship between BMI and relative mortality risk is J-or U-shaped; both a low and a high BMI...
INTRODUCTION: Findings regarding the association between overweight and all-cause mortality range fr...
Background: The relative contributions of a low and high body mass index (BMI [weight in kilograms d...
BACKGROUND: The relative contributions of a low and high body mass index (BMI [weight in kilograms d...