Body composition and the monitoring of non-communicable chronic disease risk

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Abstract

There is a need for simple proxies of health status, in order to improve monitoring of chronic disease risk within and between populations, and to assess the efficacy of public health interventions as well as clinical management. This review discusses how, building on recent research findings, body composition outcomes may contribute to this effort. Traditionally, body mass index has been widely used as the primary index of nutritional status in children and adults, but it has several limitations. We propose that combining information on two generic traits, indexing both the 'metabolic load' that increases chronic non-communicable disease risk, and the homeostatic 'metabolic capacity' that protects against these diseases, offers a new opportunity to improve assessment of disease risk. Importantly, this approach may improve the ability to take into account ethnic variability in chronic disease risk. This approach could be applied using simple measurements readily carried out in the home or community, making it ideal for M-health and E-health monitoring strategies.

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APA

Wells, J. C. K., & Shirley, M. K. (2016). Body composition and the monitoring of non-communicable chronic disease risk. Global Health, Epidemiology and Genomics. Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/gheg.2016.9

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