Friedl Karl E, Leu John R
Fort Bragg Office, U.S. Army Research Institute of Environmental Medicine, Natick, MA 0 1760-5007, USA.
Mil Med. 2002 Dec;167(12):994-1000.
Body fat standards have been used by the military services since the early 1980s to prevent obesity and motivate good fitness habits. The Army Weight Control Program has continued to undergo evaluation and incorporate improvements based on emerging scientific findings. Recently drafted revisions of Department of Defense-wide procedures address issues of consistency and validity raised by external oversight groups. This study evaluated the impact of three proposed refinements of the Army Weight Control Program. Anthropometric measurements and fitness test performance were obtained in a randomized sample of 1,038 male and 347 nonpregnant female soldiers at three Army posts. Of this sample, 11% of men and 17% of women were overweight and overfat; 6.3 and 9.8%, respectively, were currently on the Army Weight Control Program. Screening weight tables that ensure women are not inappropriately striving to meet weights more stringent than "healthy" weight (i.e., body mass index < 25 kg/m2) still correctly identified all women for evaluation for the age-specific body fat standards. Body fat estimation using more valid DoD body fat equations that include an abdominal circumference for women reduced the number of female soldiers currently classified as exceeding fat standards, coincidentally resulting in a comparable prevalence of male and female soldiers over the fat standards (12%). A body fat allowance for young soldiers who scored very well on the physical fitness test could have benefited one-fourth of the soldiers exceeding fat standards and acknowledges biological variability in body fat thresholds. Whereas this linkage may motivate fitness habits, it complicates enforcement of reasonably achievable body fat standards. The proposed changes in fat screening and measurement methods are appropriate, but the impact to health and physical readiness of the Force cannot be accurately predicted or measured because of the absence of comprehensive baseline data and tracking mechanisms.
自20世纪80年代初以来,军队一直使用体脂标准来预防肥胖并激励养成良好的健身习惯。陆军体重控制计划一直在接受评估,并根据新出现的科学发现进行改进。最近起草的国防部范围内程序的修订案解决了外部监督小组提出的一致性和有效性问题。本研究评估了陆军体重控制计划三项提议改进措施的影响。在三个陆军基地对1038名男性和347名未怀孕女性士兵的随机样本进行了人体测量和体能测试。在这个样本中,11%的男性和17%的女性超重且体脂超标;目前分别有6.3%和9.8%的人参加陆军体重控制计划。确保女性不会不适当地努力达到比“健康”体重(即体重指数<25kg/m²)更严格体重的筛查体重表,仍然能够正确识别所有女性以根据特定年龄的体脂标准进行评估。使用更有效的国防部体脂公式(包括女性腹围)进行体脂估计,减少了目前被归类为超过体脂标准的女性士兵数量,巧合的是,导致超过体脂标准的男女士兵患病率相当(12%)。对体能测试成绩非常好的年轻士兵给予体脂 allowance,可能会使四分之一超过体脂标准的士兵受益,并承认体脂阈值存在生物学差异。虽然这种联系可能会激励健身习惯,但它使合理可实现的体脂标准的执行变得复杂。提议的体脂筛查和测量方法的改变是合适的,但由于缺乏全面的基线数据和跟踪机制,无法准确预测或衡量对部队健康和身体准备状态的影响。