It’s a bad study metric though.
Don’t get me wrong, there are a fuck ton of unhealthy people in the US, but weight isn’t the end all be all. I’ve been “overweight” since I was 15, for the last 14 years now. I’m also 11% bodyfat and very very athletic. Weight and BMI are bad metrics.
Unless there is a corresponding study that says 18-25 year olds are more jacked than previous generations, your anecdote is probably not relevant.
Garbage in, garbage out. If you do a complex mathematical equation, and one of the values is garbage, the output is also garbage.
I don’t doubt that this generation is more overweight, but using flawed data and pointing at the lack of data proving the flawed data matters, doesn’t make it good data.
What? Nothing in here is “in relation to other generations”.
It’s simply stating they are “overweight or obese”.
Overweight and obese are up in relation to other generations.
That’s, like, a well known fact my guy.
Other generations have a well documented obesity problem. I was trying to come up with some way that 18-25 was different.
BMI isn’t always a good metric for an individual, but it is a great metric for populations studies when there are other controls. It can be used to analyze trends, but no one person should feel like it means much for them in particular.