Anonymous wrote:I’m 5’4 and hover between 165-170.
My cholesterol is good, triglycerides normal, low blood pressure, good immune system, lots of energy.
So in my case—yes!
Anonymous wrote:Define overweight? I mean - look at that female rugby player. She is technically "overweight" by BMI but she's 100% more in shape than most people on the planet.
Anonymous wrote:Define overweight? I mean - look at that female rugby player. She is technically "overweight" by BMI but she's 100% more in shape than most people on the planet.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes. Being slightly overweight is better/healthier as you age.
I hear that a lot, but isn't it based off one study which wasn't repeated? Lower weight and even fasting is healthier, according to repeated studies.
Both of the groups of studies you refer to suffer from some faults- not frequently repeated and not conducted in environments that replicate real human life (most of the underweight/fasting studies were done on mice.)
The other issue is what you mean by "healthier." To my recollection, some of the underweight studies showed longer life span but more likely to have health issues and disease in that life span.
Bottom line, as with most things....stay within the mid-range. Don't be obese and don't be underweight. Everything in the middle is the same level of "healthy" if you are judging only on BMI/weight.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes. Being slightly overweight is better/healthier as you age.
I hear that a lot, but isn't it based off one study which wasn't repeated? Lower weight and even fasting is healthier, according to repeated studies.
Anonymous wrote:Yes. Being slightly overweight is better/healthier as you age.
Anonymous wrote:Yes. Being slightly overweight is better/healthier as you age.