| Literature DB >> 27313875 |
Abstract
Rationale. The concept of obesity has been known since ancient world; however, the current standard definition of obesity was endorsed only about a decade ago. There is a need for researches to understand multiple approaches to defining obesity and how and why the standard definition was developed. The review will help to grasp the complexity of the problem and can lead to novel hypotheses in obesity research. Objective. This paper focuses on the objective to understand historical background on the development of "reference and standard tables" of weight as a platform for normal versus abnormal body weight definition. Methods. A systematic literature review was performed to chronologically summarize the definition of body weight from time of Hippocrates till the year of 2010. Conclusion. This paper presents the historical background on the development of "reference and standard tables" of weight as a platform for normal versus abnormal body weight definition. Knowledge of historical approaches to the concept of obesity can motivate researchers to find new hypotheses and utilize the appropriate obesity assessments to address their objectives.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27313875 PMCID: PMC4904092 DOI: 10.1155/2016/2460285
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Obes ISSN: 2090-0708
Development of weight standard tables.
| Year [ref.] | Author | Criteria | Population | Screening | Development | Milestone/outcome |
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1842 [ | Quetelet |
| Belgian men and women | With clothes and shoes (as is) |
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| 1846 [ | Hutchinson |
| 5 feet 1 inch to 6 feet, 30 y.o. | Average weights of 30 y.o. men for each inch of height from 5′1′′ to 6 feet | “ | |
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| 1867 [ | Fish |
| American | Medical Review of English Tables (from John Hutchinson) |
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| 1912 [ | The Association of Life Insurance Medical Directors and the Actuarial Society of America |
| Mortality for insured population | Seasonal consideration to have the same clothes and shoes |
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| 1937 [ |
Dublin and Lotha (1882–1969), Metropolitan Life Insurance Company frame [ |
| ~4 million people insured by MetLife 1911–1935 | Height, with street shoes Weight, only indoor clothes | Dublin divided the average weights into three types of body frames: small, medium, and large From the prospective of insurance, the bad weight was considered to be 20–25%, with morbid obesity at 70–100% above the “ideal” | “ |
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| 1942-3 [ | Metropolitan Life Insurance Company (MLIC) |
| Proposed tables for “ideal weight” for men and women >25 y.o. by frame size | Height, with street shoes |
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| 1959 | The Build and Blood Pressure Study |
| US and Canada-insured (from 26 life insurance companies) people 1935–1954 20% self-reported | Street shoes and indoor clothes |
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| 1975 [ | Fogarty Center Conference on Obesity | Range of acceptable weight Suggested range BMI: | Based on MLIC 1959 | Adjusted street shoes and indoor clothes |
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| 1979 [ | The Build and Blood Pressure Study, second study |
| Insured people | Street shoes and indoor clothes |
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| 1980 [ | US Department of Agriculture and US Department of Health, Education and Welfare | Adjusted range of acceptable weight of age and height specific | MLIC 59 | Adjusted street shoes and indoor clothes |
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| 1985 [ | National Institute of Health | “Overweight”: BMI ≥ 85th percentile, “severe overweight”: | NHANES II | Criteria matched for range of acceptable weight: not ≥20% of desirable weight for midpoint of medium-build person MLIC, 83. |
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| 1985 [ | US Department of Agriculture and US Department of Health, Education and Welfare | Overweight translated to BMI for men ~25-26 and for women | MLIC 59 |
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| 1990 [ | US Department of Agriculture and US Department of Health, Education and Welfare | BMI ≥ 25 for ages 19–34 and ≥27 for ages ≥35 years | All adults (both sexes combined) by 2 age groups |
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| 1995 [ | World Health Organization (WHO) | Mortality curve | International data | Mortality curves for BMI selection |
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| 1995 [ | US Department of Agriculture and US Department of Health, Education and Welfare | BMI ≥ 25 for all ages | All adults (both sexes combined) for all ages | No shoes, no clothes |
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| 1998 | National Institute of Health (NIH) and National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI) | Relation of BMI and risk of morbidity and mortality | RCT and epidemiological studies |
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| 2010 [ | US Department of Agriculture and US Department of Health, Education and Welfare | WHO International Classification of Weight based on BMI level was adopted for US population | USA | Matches with WHO and NIH and NHLBI criteria |
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Criteria for table generation.
Next edition is expected in 2015.
“National Nutrition Monitoring and Related Research Act of 1990”—Public Law 101–445, Title III, Section 301, stated that a report entitled “Dietary Guidelines for Americans” shall contain nutritional and dietary information and guidelines for the general public and “shall be promoted by each Federal agency in carrying out any Federal food, nutrition, or health program” [28].
Table of height and weight [17, page 139].
| Height | Weight (pounds) | |
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| Feet | Inches | |
| 5 | 1 | 120 |
| 5 | 2 | 125 |
| 5 | 3 | 130 |
| 5 | 4 | 135 |
| 5 | 5 | 140 |
| 5 | 6 | 143 |
| 5 | 7 | 145 |
| 5 | 8 | 148 |
| 5 | 9 | 155 |
| 5 | 10 | 160 |
| 5 | 11 | 165 |
| 6 | ∞ | 170 |
Range of acceptable body weight [18].
| Height (feet-inches) | Men (pounds) | Women (pounds) |
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| 4′10′′ | 92–119 | |
| 4′11′′ | 96–129 | |
| 5′0′′ | 96–125 | |
| 5′1′′ | 99–128 | |
| 5′2′′ | 112–141 | 102–131 |
| 5′3′′ | 115–144 | 105–134 |
| 5′4′′ | 118–148 | 108–138 |
| 5′5′′ | 121–152 | 111–142 |
| 5′6′′ | 124–156 | 114–146 |
| 5′7′′ | 128–161 | 118–150 |
| 5′8′′ | 132–166 | 122–154 |
| 5′9′′ | 136–170 | 126–150 |
| 5′10′′ | 140–174 | 130–163 |
| 5′11′′ | 144–179 | 134–168 |
| 6′0′′ | 148–184 | 138–173 |
| 6′1′′ | 152–189 | |
| 6′2′′ | 156–194 | |
| 6′3′′ | 160–199 | |
| 6′4′′ | 164–204 |
Note: height without shoes and weight without clothes.
International classification of adults based on body mass index.
| Classification | BMI (kg/m2) | |
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| Cut-off points | Additional cut-off points | |
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| Severe thinness | <16.00 | <16.0 |
| Moderate thinness | 16.00–16.99 | 16.00–16.99 |
| Mild thinness | 17.00–18.49 | 17.00–18.49 |
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| Preobese | 25.00–29.99 | 25.00–27.49 |
| 27.50–29.99 | ||
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| Class I | 30.00–34.99 | 30.00–32.49 |
| 32.50–34.99 | ||
| Class II | 35.00–39.99 | 35.00–37.49 |
| 37.50–39.99 | ||
| Class III | ≥40.00 | ≥40.00 |
Source: from WHO, 1995, WHO, 2000, and WHO, 2004 [15, 26, 29, 30].
Overweight and obese children and adolescents [16].
| Category | Children and adolescents (BMI for age percentile range | Adults (BMI) |
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| Underweight | Less than the 5th percentile | Less than 18.5 kg/m2 |
| Healthy weight | 5th percentile to less than the 85th percentile | 18.5 to 24.9 kg/m2 |
| Overweight | 85th percentile to less than the 95th percentile | 25.0 to 29.9 kg/m2 |
| Obese | Equal to or greater than the 95th percentile | 30.0 kg/m2 or greater |
Growth charts are available at http://www.cdc.gov/growthcharts/.