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Started by Hypatia, April 06, 2008, 05:17:59 PM
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Quote from: Hypatia on April 06, 2008, 05:17:59 PMWomen and men need widely differing percentages of body fat to be healthy. For women, the range is ideally 20-21%. For men it's 8-14%.The Home Body Fat Test is something you can do yourself with a cloth tape measure. To start, you have to tell it if you're male or female. Depending on which sex you input, it tells you to measure mostly different body parts.So this is where it gets complicated. I have a basically male skeleton, upon which two years of HRT have redistributed my body fat somewhat. My waist-hip ratio is currently .85, which is borderline female range. My breasts are B cup sized. My BMI (which isn't differentiated by sex) is 25.0, which is the lower borderline of the overweight range (I've been dieting and expect to have it under 25 very soon).So... how can a TS like me calculate her body fat percentage? When I took the home body fat test as female, it gave me a result of 26.5. When I took it as male, I got a result of 19. So I thought just average them out for a tentative 22.75%. But I have no idea if this would be valid data. What to do?
Quote from: Hypatia on April 08, 2008, 12:07:54 AMI'm skeptical that the home test with a tape measure can be accurate at all. I will reserve judgment until I can get it measured by one of those high-tech methods.My figure appears perfectly trim and svelte to onlookers, when I say I need to lose weight everyone tells me I'm crazy. But the BMI numbers keep going against me.