Key points
- 'Obese' is a medical term used to describe a person with a high excess of body fat.
- A person is described as obese if their body mass index (BMI) is greater than 30 kg/m虏.
- BMI is just one way to measure obesity.
- An obese person is at greater risk of type 2 diabetesA disease more common in older people where person's body cells no longer respond to insulin produced by the pancreas., heart disease and some types of cancer.
Obesity and exercise
Video
Can you answer these questions based on the video?
1. Body mass index - BMI - is calculated using a person's height and 鈥?
2. According to the video, which two words describe how a diet should be?
A person's height and weight.
Balanced and healthy.
What is obesity?
A person is said to be obese if they have such a high excess of body fat that their health might be affected.
Health workers use body mass index (BMI) to assess obesity. They measure the height and mass of a person and then use the equation below to calculate their BMI:
BMI = mass (kg) 梅 height虏 (m虏)
For example, if a person has a mass of 60 kg and a height of 1.65 m:
BMI = 60 kg 梅 1.65虏
BMI = 22 kg/m虏
A person is overweight if their BMI is between 25 kg/m虏 and 30 kg/m虏. A person with a BMI over 30 kg/m虏 is said to be obese.
Therefore, the person in this example can be described as being a healthy weight.
How might someone become obese?
Energy balance is the relationship between energy input (calories consumed through food and drink) and energy output (calories used by the body for our energy requirements).
This relationship dictates whether weight is lost, gained, or remains the same.
A person might become obese by eating food that supplies more energy than they need.
A 13-year-old girl needs about 9,000 kilojoules (KJ) of energy each day. Boys the same age needs around 10,000 KJ/day. Adult women need roughly 8,400 KJ/day and adult men need roughly 10,500 KJ/day.
If people consistently eat food that supplies more energy than this, without taking extra exercise, they might eventually become obese.
Health problems related to obesity
Obesity increases the risk of life-threatening health problems, including:
- Heart disease
- Stroke
- Type 2 diabetes
- Some types of cancer, including cancers of the breast, bowel and liver
A person can prevent obesity by eating sensible amounts of nutritious food and exercising regularly.
Test your knowledge
Quiz - Health and obesity
Play the Atomic Labs game! gamePlay the Atomic Labs game!
Try out practical experiments in this KS3 science game.
More on Nutrition, digestion and excretion
Find out more by working through a topic
- count7 of 15
- count8 of 15
- count9 of 15
- count10 of 15