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This article originally posted 18 May, 2012 and appeared in  Cardiovascular HealthObesityPreventionPractice ManagementPublic Health and PolicyIssue 626

Keep Your Waist Circumference to Less than Half Your Height

According to new research presented at a scientific meeting, waist to height ratio better is a better predictor of CVD and diabetes than BMI....

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Study leader Dr. Margaret Ashwell, an independent consultant and former science director of the British Nutrition Foundation stated that, "Keeping your waist circumference to less than half your height can help increase life expectancy for every person in the world."

Thus a man who is 6ft or 72 inches tall (183 cm), should keep his waist under 36 inches (91 cm), and a woman who is 5ft 4 in or 64 inches tall (163 cm), should keep her waist measurement under 32 inches (81 cm). Ashwell said the measure should be considered as a screening tool.

The idea of using Waist to Height Ratio (WHtR) to predict cardiometabolic risk is not new, but is coming to prominence as more studies reveal its value.

At the meeting, Ashwell presented the findings of a study that analyzed the health of 300,000 people and found WHtR was better able to predict high blood pressure, diabetes, heart attacks and strokes than BMI.

BMI is a ratio of a person's weight in kilos to the square of their height in meters. However, it does not take into account the distribution of fat around the body.

Abdominal fat affects organs like the heart, liver and kidneys more adversely than fat around the hips and bottom, in terms of cardiometabolic risk.

Last year, Ashwell co-authored a paper on the increasing importance of using Waist-to-Height Ratio (WHtR) to assess cardiometabolic risk, and pleaded for scientists to use a consistent terminology to express the ratio so it can easily be searched for in the literature.

An advantage of WHtR is the simplicity of the health message "keep your waist circumference to less than half your height." This is a much easier thought to hold in mind than BMI, where not only do you have to work out the ratio of your weight in kilos to the square of your height in meters, but also remember what the healthy range is.

To measure the waist circumference accurately, you should measure it mid-way between the lower rib and the iliac crest (the top of the pelvic bone at the hip), this is the method recommended by the World Health Organization, says Ashwell.

"The Increasing Importance of Waist-to-Height Ratio to Assess Cardiometabolic Risk: A Plea for Consistent Terminology; Margaret Ashwell and Lucy M. Browning; The Open Obesity Journal, 2011, 3, 70-77. 

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This article originally posted 18 May, 2012 and appeared in  Cardiovascular HealthObesityPreventionPractice ManagementPublic Health and PolicyIssue 626

Past five issues: Diabetes Clinical Mastery Series Issue 137 | Issue 677 | SGLT2 Special Edition Issue 2 | Diabetes Clinical Mastery Series Issue 136 | Issue 676 |

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