Posted Jan 6, 2012
Women with an abdominal girth of more than 31.5 inches could be categorized as obese under new guidelines being considered, a revision from the current 35.4-inch standard used as a marker for metabolic syndrome, it has been learned.
The Japan Society for the Study of Obesity (JASSO) is considering including women with a body mass index (BMI) – a measure of weight relative to height – of below 25 but a waist circumference of above 31.5 inches as excessively fat.
People with a BMI of less than 25 are not considered overweight under current guidelines.
The government-set conditions for being obese include a BMI of 25 or more, health problems such as a lipid abnormality and high-blood pressure, and having an abdominal girth of 33.5 inches or more for men and 35.4 inches or more for women.
The Health, Labor and Welfare Ministry uses these figures when deciding whether a person has metabolic syndrome in a special health check program for people aged from 40 to 74.
However, experts have pointed out that the risk of arteriosclerosis and other health problems increases for people with excessive visceral fat even if their BMI is below 25.
This prompted JASSO’s study committee for judging criteria of obesity, led by Gunma University Prof. Masatomo Mori, to reexamine the criteria for people with a BMI of less than 25.
By analyzing data released in Japan up to 2010, the committee concluded that health problems such as lipid abnormalities sharply increase when the cross-sectional area of visceral fat exceeds 100 square centimeters for men and 70 square centimeters for women. This corresponds to an abdominal girth of 33.5 inches for men and 31.5 inches for women.
JASSO is considering categorizing people with a BMI of less than 25 as obese if their waist size exceeds the new standard and they have some health problems.
“The conditions for being obese and the criteria for deciding if people have metabolic syndrome overlap considerably,” Mori said.
The lower girth figure likely will affect a planned review of the health check program, which the ministry plans to carry out in fiscal 2013.
Mori said JASSO would settle on the new standard within fiscal 2012 so it can be reflected in revised abdominal girth standards used for the ministry’s health check.