diet and nutrition

Your Waistline Can Predict Health Risks

pear and appleDoes your weight go to your middle or to your thighs and hips? What used to simply make fitting in clothes a problem has emerged as an important indicator of future good health. Called waist-to-hip ratio, or WHR, knowing this number can help you reduce your chances of developing heart disease, diabetes, osteoporosis, obesity and more.

"We're numbed by the scale," says Marie Savard, M.D., co-author of Apples and Pears: The Body Shape Solution for Weight Loss and Wellness (Atria Books, 2005). "We need to measure health in inches, not in pounds."

Savard explains that apple-shaped women usually have large waists and breasts, but slender legs and hips. They build up visceral fat in the belly, putting them at greater risk for certain diseases. Yet exercise and healthful eating can help. If you're pear-shaped, you're probably small on top, have a well-defined waistline, and are larger on your bottom. You have some health risks, but pear-zone fat is actually protective.