BVI: Body volume Index
The Body Volume Index (BVI) is a new measurement for human obesity that has been proposed as an alternative to the Body Mass Index (BMI).
8 women with the same BMI rating (BMI - 30) but with different weight distribution and abdominal volume, so they have different BVI ratings
BMI is based on a measurement of total mass, irrespective of the location of the mass, but BVI looks at the relationship between mass and volume distribution (i.e. where the body mass is located on the body).
The Body Volume Index (BVI) was originally devised in February 2000 as a new computer-based measurement for measuring obesity; an alternative to the Body Mass Index (BMI) which was originally conceived between 1830 and 1850
BMI is based on height and weight only, but the new BVI system automatically measures BMI, waist circumference and waist-hip ratio in addition to highly sophisticated volumetric and body composition analysis.
BVI is an application that can be used on a 3D Full Body Scanner to determine individual health risk, whether the scanning hardware uses visible light optical information or otherwise. BVI allows for differentiation between people who are assigned the same BMI rating, but who have a different body shape and weight distribution, so that their individual BMI rating may not accurately reflect their own risk.
BVI has undergone clinical trials in the U.S. and Europe as part of a three year collaborative project, the Body Benchmark Study.
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