BMI?

Alrighty, the world's debate. Is BMI an accurate way to measure if your weight is healthy? I want to make sure I stay a healthy weight, however I know some people use BMI and others claim it is "outdated, horrible, yaddy yaddy yada". So... What should one weigh? I'm a 5'6 female and am trying to figure out! 😅 The BMI scale I saw said 115-150 lbs. Is this good or totally off?
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Replies

  • lemurcat2
    lemurcat2 Posts: 7,885 Member
    sijomial wrote: »
    Do you not think that you can find your personal healthy weight within that wide range?
    If not - why not?

    Have you previously been somewhere in that range in your adult life? How did it feel to you?

    This. It's a wide range, most women are at a healthy weight somewhere within it, but if you don't think it works for you there are other ways to determine a healthy weight.

    I didn't use it, as I knew I liked how I looked at 120-125 and that happened to be within the range for me (5'3).
  • gcminton
    gcminton Posts: 170 Member
    I try to look at BMI the way I do the scale. It's a piece of the picture, but it is very limited in what it can tell you.

    I've also never been at a healthy weight, so for me I have my goal set to the middle of the healthy range for my height and I'll reevaluate as I get closer.

    Nobody can say for sure what your ideal weight ought to be, since we're all a bit different as far as body composition goes. It might be a good idea to take a similar stance as me: set a rough goal and see how you feel as you approach it. You can always change it later to either lose more weight, regain some, maybe try lifting weights, etc.
  • paperpudding
    paperpudding Posts: 9,278 Member
    7rainbow wrote: »
    Alrighty, the world's debate. Is BMI an accurate way to measure if your weight is healthy? I want to make sure I stay a healthy weight, however I know some people use BMI and others claim it is "outdated, horrible, yaddy yaddy yada". So... What should one weigh? I'm a 5'6 female and am trying to figure out! 😅 The BMI scale I saw said 115-150 lbs. Is this good or totally off?


    for the vast majority of people, yes, BMI is a pretty accurate guide to whether you are a healthy weight.
    Sure, there are some obvious outliers - but is usually obvious if you are one of them.

    It doesn't tell you exactly what you should weigh but it does give you a range and it is highly unlikely you will be at a healthy weight if you are not within the range or at most slightly out of it..

    As was pointed out upthread and as I have said in such threads before, sporty young men ( not elite bodybuilders, just regular active youngish men) can be slightly beyond the range and still be at a healthy weight.
    Slightly ie with a BMI of say 27 or 28.

    It is worth taking such factors into account when deciding where in the range is likely to apply to you best.

    Me as a middle aged, not that sporty woman, who had a BMI of 28 - wasn't out of the range because young and muscular, was out of the range because plain old overweight.
    Conversely I am not a teenage girl and I am not trying to get to a BMI of 20, which might of been healthy for me 30 years ago

    I think for me settling at a BMI of 23 is ideal.
  • mpkpbk2015
    mpkpbk2015 Posts: 766 Member
    BMI is a range and I look at it as I look at the weight scale ranges , it's not the end all and be all to determine how healthy someone is or not. I think you have to take many other factors in your life into consideration along with your BMI to conclude your overall health and fitness. I think that's why it is in a range, because someone 20 years old and someone 50 years old although the same weight wouldn't necessarily have the same BMI. I am currently in the middle of my range and am very comfortable with it. If I was at the lower end of the range I would be rail thin and look sickly and unhealthy. This is just my opinion and I am sure you will get many on the subject and I am sure some will disagree with me, but again it's my opinion and it works for me.
  • davew0000
    davew0000 Posts: 125 Member
    I suspect that people’s issue with BMI is that there are better metrics? Like BF%, waist size or waist to hip ratio.

    It’s a nicely statistically correlated risk factor for weight related health issues. But there is plenty that it doesn’t capture, as others have said, such as frame size or muscle.
  • BMI is useful but shouldn't be the only tool used
  • sijomial
    sijomial Posts: 19,809 Member
    Wonder if the OP is reading these responses and getting something out of them?
  • Theoldguy1
    Theoldguy1 Posts: 2,495 Member
    I am 20lbs over the the top end of the range for BMI. I will never be in the range and am not striving for it. I am built pretty thick (thighs, calves, arms) and carry a decent amount of muscle so in general for me it is not a measurement I am concerned about.

    What type of resistance training routine and/or manual labor job do you do to carry a decent amount of muscle?
  • Mellouk89
    Mellouk89 Posts: 469 Member
    edited March 2021
    Can you even build substantial muscle mass with manual labor?

    I've worked pretty tough jobs, none of the people I worked with were particularly buff. Unless they did some type of training on the side.
  • gionrogado
    gionrogado Posts: 45 Member
    just get within the healthy range of bmi first, then decide if it is healthy for you or not. most people say it suits them fine.
  • janejellyroll
    janejellyroll Posts: 25,763 Member
    Mellouk89 wrote: »
    Can you even build substantial muscle mass with manual labor?

    I've worked pretty tough jobs, none of the people I worked with were particularly buff. Unless they did some type of training on the side.

    You can build muscle with any type of repetitive progressive lifting. People had muscles before weights were invented, so it obviously can be done. That doesn't mean that most manual laborers are going to look buff, but you can also build muscle without looking really buff.
  • cwolfman13
    cwolfman13 Posts: 41,865 Member
    Mellouk89 wrote: »
    Can you even build substantial muscle mass with manual labor?

    I've worked pretty tough jobs, none of the people I worked with were particularly buff. Unless they did some type of training on the side.

    "Buff" in terms of adding on slabs of muscle like a bodybuilder...no. But yes, you can put on muscle mass with labor intensive jobs. I did landscape construction for a couple of years in college and I had a pretty good physique to show for it. Not huge in size or anything, but good musculature and pretty lean. I was also well proportioned because I was using all of the muscles in my body for just about everything I did. For "buff", I think of lots of various isolation movements to overwork specific muscles or groups of muscles to make them "unnaturally" large...ie that wouldn't really happen to that degree outside of a gym, thus the quotes.