| The BMI, or Body Mass Index, is pretty flawed. It's a number that  looks at your weight in relation to your height, and for decades people have  used it to determine a person's obesity  level and their risk of associated  illnesses like cardiovascular  disease. A new study that was funded by the National Institutes of Health  and the American Heart Association looked at a different number, the  waist-to-hip ratio, which specifically measures whether a person is storing  excess fat around their  middle. The results? People with a normal BMI but who had "central  obesity" (or what most people would term "belly fat") had  twice the risk of early  death compared to those who had a BMI of "overweight" or  "obese."   Abdominal  fat, it turns out, could be a much more reliable indicator of mortality  than one's weight.  | 
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