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- Type of diabetes
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It very clearly says "increased risk". It doesn't say "high risk" . There's a difference - see my earlier post.
Also, if you redo it but this time put in 29 for your waist measurement suddenly you're 0.85, absolutely OK, you'll live forever.
That tells me a couple of things. Firstly, that this ratio calculation isn't really aimed at people with 29.5 inch waists. Secondly, that if a change of only 0.5 inches in waist circumference has such a dramatic impact on your health (I do not believe that) the test is overly sensitive to a minor change - in other words, it's not a test, it's a wake-up if you've been kidding yourself about the weight you've gained. I don't think that applies to you.
So it's not the "belly fat" it's another "might be OK for 75% of people" estimated answer to a general "am I overweight" question - which I'd file alongside BMI and that machine in Boots in terms of accuracy.
I'm still not seeing what's concerning you.
Also, if you redo it but this time put in 29 for your waist measurement suddenly you're 0.85, absolutely OK, you'll live forever.
That tells me a couple of things. Firstly, that this ratio calculation isn't really aimed at people with 29.5 inch waists. Secondly, that if a change of only 0.5 inches in waist circumference has such a dramatic impact on your health (I do not believe that) the test is overly sensitive to a minor change - in other words, it's not a test, it's a wake-up if you've been kidding yourself about the weight you've gained. I don't think that applies to you.
So it's not the "belly fat" it's another "might be OK for 75% of people" estimated answer to a general "am I overweight" question - which I'd file alongside BMI and that machine in Boots in terms of accuracy.
I'm still not seeing what's concerning you.