Evelyn1
New member
Okay, so here's the thing:
Last Tuesday, at the doctor's, his super-whiz-bang medical scale said I weighed 308 lbs. That, plus my equally alarming cholesterol and fasting glucose levels, inspired me to start trying to eat healthy and live right. As part of that effort, I went out tonight and bought myself a household/bathroom scale.
It says I weigh 304 pounds. So either I have lost 4 lbs over the last week (entirely possible, and if so - YAHOOOO!!!!), or my scale is not calibrated quite the same as my doc's scale (equally possible), or some combination of the two (even more possible and probably the case).
Okay, I know it's just a number. But my motivation for trying to get fit is almost entirely based on health concerns, which means that doctors are very much involved, and doctors can take these numbers extremely seriously. For instance, if I weigh 308 (or even 305) lbs, my BMI is (just) over 45 and I'm officially "super-obese." But if I really do weigh 304, my BMI is (barely) under 45 and I'm merely "morbidly obese." That's a whole different set of gravely compassionate looks and daunting medical statistics.
So which set of numbers do I go by? Should I use my home scale only for differences between one weighing and another, and take only the doc's scales numbers as "real"? Should I ask the doc if I can drop by once a week to weigh myself on his mega-accurate medical super-scale? Should I bring my home scale with me to my next doctor's appointment for a side-by-side calibration showdown?
(Should I stop overthinking this already, and go get some exercise or cook myself some veggies or something?)
Arrrgh.
Last Tuesday, at the doctor's, his super-whiz-bang medical scale said I weighed 308 lbs. That, plus my equally alarming cholesterol and fasting glucose levels, inspired me to start trying to eat healthy and live right. As part of that effort, I went out tonight and bought myself a household/bathroom scale.
It says I weigh 304 pounds. So either I have lost 4 lbs over the last week (entirely possible, and if so - YAHOOOO!!!!), or my scale is not calibrated quite the same as my doc's scale (equally possible), or some combination of the two (even more possible and probably the case).
Okay, I know it's just a number. But my motivation for trying to get fit is almost entirely based on health concerns, which means that doctors are very much involved, and doctors can take these numbers extremely seriously. For instance, if I weigh 308 (or even 305) lbs, my BMI is (just) over 45 and I'm officially "super-obese." But if I really do weigh 304, my BMI is (barely) under 45 and I'm merely "morbidly obese." That's a whole different set of gravely compassionate looks and daunting medical statistics.
So which set of numbers do I go by? Should I use my home scale only for differences between one weighing and another, and take only the doc's scales numbers as "real"? Should I ask the doc if I can drop by once a week to weigh myself on his mega-accurate medical super-scale? Should I bring my home scale with me to my next doctor's appointment for a side-by-side calibration showdown?
(Should I stop overthinking this already, and go get some exercise or cook myself some veggies or something?)
Arrrgh.


