casebro
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Jun 14, 2005
- Messages
- 19,788
So, 'more likely' in this context means an average BMI of 28 for the 'exercise' cohort, versus average BMI of 25 for the 'calorie reduction' cohort.
Both 25 and 28 are well within the healthy range of 17-34, as shown by a study done by Kaiser Permanante Canada. When obesity starts at 35? how about looking at the mental gymnastics of subjects below 30 vs above 35?
Why didn't they poll a group of obese? Couldn't they find any?
Reminds me of Statin drug studies done on patients in their 50s, when most heart attacks occur in our 70s.
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Waitwaitwait- the two groups probably have a gausian bell curve of weight, with averages of 25 vs 28. There is probably an 80% overlap in the middle of the curve- many heavy people think diet is key, and as many skinny subjects think exercise is the key. But the averages is a difference of 3 BMI, when the overall range is from 15-50? 3? Meaningful?
And what was the avg BMI of the combo theory group? 26, or 23? When combo therapy is supposed to be best, why isn't it mentioned in the abstract?
Sounds like a study that had to be datamined for anything substantial.
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