| My favourite comment on this is the following joke exchange: Doctor: Your BMI is high I'd like you make some dietary adjustments. Patient: BMI doesn't measure fat accurately for example professional Rugby players are marked as obese but aren't. Doctor: Are you a Rugby player? Patrient: No. It's a good guideline. Don't let edge cases control your perception and let professionals do their thing with the tools they have -- they're aware of limitations that's why their professionals. |
If we're just relying on the professional's opinion then they don't really need the BMI, right. They can just look at you and go "huh, you're looking a little thicc today."
BMI is a good tool for population health, a bad tool for individual health, and if it just so happens to correlate to your thiccness then you probably already know that.
I agree with parent that body composition analysis via DEXA or air displacement plethysmography is a far better metric.
I have no doubt that a carpenter can bang a nail in with a screwdriver 90% of the time, that's why they're professionals after all, but when I see it, I can't help but think "there's gotta be a better way mate."
[1] https://www.nytimes.com/2019/01/17/sports/football/the-nfls-...