BMI Calculator

BMI has been used by the WHO (World Health Organization) as the standard for recording obesity statistics since the early 1980s. In the United States, BMI is also used as a measure of underweight, owing to advocacy on behalf of those suffering with eating disorders, such as anorexia nervosa and bulimia nervosa.

BMI can be calculated quickly and without expensive equipment. However, BMI categories do not take into account many factors such as frame size and muscularity.  The categories also fail to account for varying proportions of fat, bone, cartilage, water weight, and more.

 

Despite this, BMI categories are regularly regarded as a satisfactory tool for measuring whether sedentary individuals are “underweight”, “overweight” or “obese” with various exemptions, such as: athletes, children, the elderly, and the infirm. 

One basic problem, especially in athletes, is that muscle weight contributes to BMI. Some professional athletes would be “overweight” or “obese” according to their BMI, despite them carrying little fat, unless the number at which they are considered “overweight” or “obese” is adjusted upward in some modified version of the calculation. In children and the elderly, differences in bone density and, thus, in the proportion of bone to total weight can mean the number at which these people are considered underweight should be adjusted downward.