|
|
|
|
|
by PuppyTailWags
1390 days ago
|
|
My understanding is the argument is not whether to use someone's fatness as a measure of health if there's a much better, specific metric besides being fat (ie. resting insulin levels) to prescribe exercise and diet over. I don't think it'll reduce stigma or whatever of fat people, but I do agree that if someone is fat but their insulin is normal maybe a doctor can pay attention to something else like if they came in for an allergy test or something they may not need the diet/exercise spiel. Similarly if someone's thin but their insulin is crazy its time to talk diet/exercise. |
|
Otherwise if your insulin is high, you need to diet and exercise. Measuring blood insulin is a lab procedure - you go to a collection lab, you get jabbed, they mail it for testing.
Measuring BMI requires stepping on a scale and knowing how tall you are.