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Orthorexia: Healthy Eating Disorder?
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Beth Dunn and her son, Greye, study up on breakfast foods. Credit: Beth Dunn
When he was eight years old, Greye Dunn worried about calories and vitamins, and had a fear of sodium.
That was last year. Greye, who turns 10 this week, tells ParentDish that he's pretty much gotten over it. His list of favorite foods now includes turkey bacon, steak and hamburgers, even though he knows they're not as good for him.
Greye and his mom, Beth Dunn, of Mays Landing, NJ, were featured in a New York Times article last year about kids who develop an unhealthy relationship with food because their parents are obsessed with making sure they eat only what would be considered uber-healthy. Though obesity is mentioned as a concern, these parents are vigilant about their children's consumption of things like sugar, processed foods and trans fats because they think it will help protect them from conditions like heart disease, diabetes and hyperactivity.
But experts say there's a time when this vigilance crosses the line, and parents can end up doing their children more harm than good. This nutritional hyper-awareness in kids seems to be a growing trend, and one that concerns many doctors, dietitians and eating disorder specialists.
Parents who are obsessed with their kids' eating habits are likely setting them up for a lifetime of problems, including anorexia and bulimia, eating disorders that are on the rise in the U.S. According to the National Eating Disorders Association, four out of ten Americans have either had or known someone who has suffered from an eating disorder.
One of those eating problems may be a condition called "orthorexia," a term coined by Dr. Steven Bratman to describe people who are obsessed with health food. In his book, Health Food Junkies, Bratman explains that the term "ortho" means straight, correct and true in Greek, and describes orthorexics as fixated on "righteous eating."
Bratman says that orthorexia is an eating disorder that often begins, "innocently, as a desire to overcome chronic illness, lose weight, to improve general health or to correct the many bad habits of the American diet."
Charlotte Hilton Andersen, a health and fitness writer, tells ParentDish via email that she believes she had some sort of disordered eating for most of her life, but that the orthorexia started after the birth of her third child, when she was 28.
"I wanted to lose my baby weight but I wanted to do it the right way," she says. "Initially it was just a goal to get healthy. I wasn't even sure what that meant so I started reading up on the nutrition and fitness research out there."
According to the National Eating Disorders Association, orthorexics are fixated on food quality and purity, becoming increasingly consumed with what and how much to eat and how to deal with slip-ups. Eventually, their food choices become so restrictive in both variety and calories that their health suffers. Their obsession with healthy eating can crowd out other activities and interests, impair relationships and become physically dangerous.
Andersen, who chronicles her struggles on her blog, says "With every new piece of information I got (Dairy is bad for you! Vegetarians live longer! Drink a protein shake after every workout to preserve muscle!), I would alter my diet to incorporate it. If I couldn't decide whether a food was good or bad I just cut it out to be safe. You can see where that went. After a while all I would eat was 5 or 6 safe foods. It was very limiting."
As a college student, Kristie Rutzel was eating mostly raw broccoli and cauliflower, and her lowest weight was 68.3 lbs. on a 5-ft. 4-in. frame. Kristie, now 26, shared her story on Rachael Ray's daytime talk show, saying she began by eliminating fast foods and junk foods to avoid the freshman 15. But then she started getting rid of all carbohydrates, eliminating fats, became a vegetarian, got rid of anything processed with flour and cut down to anything but fruits and vegetables.
While the condition is starting to gain some public recognition, doctors and therapists will not find it in the bible of mental health issues, the Diagnostic Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM). Experts says that an official diagnosis with its own DSM entry would give orthorexics a better chance of getting treatment covered by health insurance and make it easier for researchers to receive funding.
Tim Walsh, a professor of psychiatry at Columbia University who led the American Psychiatric Association's work group that reviewed eating disorders for inclusion in the next version of the manual, DSM-V, wasn't convinced.
"We're not in a position to say it doesn't exist or it's not important," he recently told Time magazine. "The real issue is significant data. Getting listed as a separate entry in the DSM requires extensive scientific knowledge of a syndrome and broad clinical acceptance, neither of which orthorexia has."
Some experts view the condition as an eating disorder deserving of its own category, saying it does not always meet the diagnostic criteria for anorexia or bulimia. For example, according to the American Psychiatric Association's practice guidelines for the diagnosis of patients with anorexia, a patient must be at "85 percent of expected body weight" or demonstrate failure to achieve growth expectations, if still growing. This is not always the case with orthorexics.
Others believe that orthorexia is a form of anorexia, including Laura Collins, Executive Director of F.E.A.S.T. (Families Empowered and Supporting Treatment of Eating Disorders), who tells ParentDish via email that, "Anorexia is a biologically based brain disorder triggered by dieting and restrictive eating." Collins believes that orthorexia is just another name for anorexia. "Not all anorexia patients have obsessive thoughts about healthy foods, but many do," she says. "Others believe they are restricting for moral reasons, or out of reaction to distressing events. "
Still others, like Lisa Young, a nutritionist in private practice and author of The Portion Teller, see orthorexia as being more on the obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) spectrum.
"There can be OCD tendencies whenever diet and exercise go beyond a healthy lifestyle and cause you to completely restrict your food intake or not attend events, and take the beauty out of eating a healthy, balanced diet," she says.
Greye's mom tells ParentDish that her son had just learned about food labels in health class shortly before being interviewed last year, so he was naturally more concerned at the time. The young boy admits he still reads labels sometimes, and though he doesn't think his friends do, he says, "It doesn't make me feel different, just healthier."
How Can Parents Help?
So what's the right way to go about encouraging your kids to eat healthfully? Young says she tries to get her patients to look at the big picture, as well as the small.
"It's all about balance," she says, "If you're eating healthy 80 percent of the time, if you cheat a little here and there it doesn't mean you're a failure. One cookie or one thing not on the top of the list isn't going to create a problem."
Furthermore, parents shouldn't restrict certain food groups or label foods as "good" or "bad."
"Research shows that the more a child is restricted, the more they will overeat later -- later that day, or later in life," says Jessica Setnick, a registered dietitian and author of the The Eating Disorders Clinical Pocket Guide. "It's important to teach kids how to eat a variety of things, and blend those things in a healthy lifestyle."
Setnick likens the process of teaching kids about healthy eating to teaching them about fire safety.
"You have to teach them about matches, you can't just keep them out of the house," she says. "The same goes for food -- you have to teach kids about all foods, you can't just keep them out of your house, or your child may end up at a friend's house eating out of their pantry."
For more information on eating disorders, contact the National Eating Disorders Association at 800-931-2237. Additional resources can be found at The Renfrew Center Foundation.












ReaderComments (Page 5 of 6)
3-03-2010 @ 8:09PM
Sean said...Too much of anything is bad...everyone's body is different.
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3-03-2010 @ 8:45PM
healthy mom said...Don't you people get the difference between healthy eating and the obsessive fear of sugar, fat, carbs, etc.? Of course, no one would die from eating a cookie or a hamburger or some other "unhealthy" food. Humans ideas about what is and isn't healthy to eat has changed over the centuries. (Bananas were once thought to be "bad".) At the moment carbs and fats are "bad" and tofu and soymilk are "good". That was not the case in the past and in other countries different foods are "bad". What's bad is when fear stops you from eating! That is what the doctor is talking about. Not whether any individual food is "good" or "bad". He is not saying to exist on a diet of fast and/or prepared foods. But not allowing yourself to eat because you fear that a food is "unhealthy" is a disorder and will negatively affect your life and your health far more than eating a cookie or a hamburger ever will!!! You have to wonder who lives longer the anorexics and the orthorexics or the junk food junkies? I'm betting the house that it's the junk food junkies-that's why we have so many insurance companies complaining about paying for diabetics and heart attacks! LOL! Everything in moderation!
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3-03-2010 @ 7:55PM
Sherry said...Only in America and other industrialized countries where food is in abundance do you see ridiculous disorders like orthorexia and anorexia. In most 3rd world and poor countries people eat food to survive. It is a fact that Anorexia Nervosa is very rare in poor countries where food is scarce. This obsession with food, in any fashion, is the product of our self-absorbed and self-obsessed society.
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3-03-2010 @ 8:01PM
Billy Blackwell said...I really don't see how you can be over cautious of what you eat. If the kid wanted to eat healthy, why go against it? Can't this family side with him and buy some of the "healthy" foods? You can make great food choices that taste good - i agree - but if you're going to tell me a hamburger is a healthy and tasty food choice then you're out of your mind. Unfortunately, I too had parents that preferred to stick to the traditional artery clogging pizza, burgers, and everything else. I personally have a huge appetite, and with my parents only buying shitty food, I found myself up to 260 pounds in the 9th grade of high school. By using "orthorexia" I guess you could say, I leaned up to 185 pounds with 6% bodyfat. I'm now into bodybuilding and nutrition goes hand in hand. Say what you want, but the hamburger feasters will die with no limbs from diabetes by the time you're 50, and I'll be up, active, and looking damn good many years after you die.
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3-03-2010 @ 8:05PM
Billy Blackwell said...Furthermore, does it say this kid threw up every time he ate? Throwing your food up and being food conscious are two different things. Don't eat bad food to begin with and you can save your teeth and esophagus from rotting away. And if your precious hamburgers are too much to give up, just get some damn exercise! Anyone ever thought of that?
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3-03-2010 @ 8:42PM
Vegan girl said...Like you Cherry, I also had anorexia when I was 25 - I over worried about my weight and restricted my intake of food until I was a 90 pounds (I am 5' 7"). I recovered after 10 years of books and coaches and gained back my weight of 125. I became a vegan ten years ago I am now 45 years old and have still not fully recovered and do allow myself to eat, but constantly worry about ingredients, fats, processed foods, sugars, salts, etc. I now weigh 135 and have been this weight for 6 years. But every time I weigh myself I feel I am 10 pounds over weight and every time I eat anything (even healthy foods, I feel guilty) It is like I almost force myself to eat something considered "bad" food once a week so I can have "balance"?? I do not enjoy eating and I still feel guilty when I eat even though I am a vegan. I think this is still a control issue and that orthorexic is the same mental illness as anorexia to control what goes into your body. I will probably always feel guilty eating but I feel comforted that what I do eat is helathy - I agree with Zoe that Americans need to learn more about the truth of what goes into factory farming and processed foods and I think as society learns more about food that many more people will start to obsess over what they eat.
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3-03-2010 @ 8:43PM
thatsawrapinc said...Plain and simple: how you should look at food, it is something that you need to live.
1: There are foods that act as medicines (cures or helps prevent problems)
2: There are foods that act as poison (kills you)
3: there are some foods that are neither bad nor have any benefits for you.
What you need to do is eliminate the poisons and eat in moderation the good and non-beneficial foods.
I suggest for each meal you have a serving (the size of your fist) of each protein, complex carbohydrates, and vegetables six times a day.
I would also spend anywhere from 30-45 minutes a day of aerobics and weight lifting.
I also like to find out what is good vs. bad in food is by having a genome test done.
Good Luck
.
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3-03-2010 @ 9:00PM
healthy mom said...Mimi your comment is ridiculous! Stay off this blog
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3-04-2010 @ 8:50AM
ken said...NO ONE ever got fat by eating right& exercising! stop blaming the food,idiots!Take control of your lives! Only problem i see is that Americans have gotten LAZY!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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3-04-2010 @ 9:28AM
Joan said...The bottom line here is that "Food was meant to sustain us." That's it. Try to envision man at the beginnig. Food wasn't meant for pleasure, but to survive. Food CAN be a pleasure to eat, especially comfort foods, but because it can be a pleasure, doesn't mean that's what it's for. A basic study of nutrition should be all that one needs to stay healthier. Don't make food your god.
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3-04-2010 @ 9:35AM
Joe said...The fundamental problem here is that you really don't understand how your "food" is actually being created and what it actually is. You might want to stop and read the labels and maybe do some Google searches on what is peddled to you as "food". Do you really know what is in that hamburger you've been eating, or that hot dog or those snacks you keep throwing in your children's lunchboxes? I'll bet you don't. What they have done is reconditioned or brainwashed a mind that instinctively knew from an early age what was food and what was not, much like an animal from the wild will turn it's nose up at food that is bad.
This is a thinly veiled plug for the commercial food industry, the same people that came up with the food pyramid.
It's a disgrace...
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3-04-2010 @ 9:59AM
Jo said...Joe, so true. I like your post.
3-04-2010 @ 9:42AM
Mary said...This subject is just to funny to even talk about because from what I have read no one is ever going to agree! When is everyone going to realize that everyone is different with different taste and likes when it comes to food. Some healthy some not but I believe that no one has a right to judge others or call names!
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3-04-2010 @ 9:57AM
r said...food is pleasurable but it is not entertainment
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3-04-2010 @ 11:18AM
Michael said...This kid's mother is a moron, pure & simple; her tactics to make her kid eat right is nothing short of child abuse. People like her should be sterilized.
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3-04-2010 @ 11:24AM
David said...What if healthy food was all we had to eat? Then we wouldn't have to make choices. There is nothing wrong with this kid. Who is to say if it is an obsession? If so, then it would be a healthy obsession, like exercise.
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3-04-2010 @ 11:34AM
Annee said...Truth time. Human beings are blessed/cursed with a natural attraction to foods that are sweet and fatty. It is a self-preservation factor that has not yet adapted to our change to industrialized societies. When people ate exclusively from the natural environment, sweet was safe, fat was scarce and craved, as was salt. Our job is to accept these facts, and not think we are "bad" for wanting these things. Then we can work to understand that we can include these items in our diets in moderation. Denial always backfires; you either over-indulge or you become a surly, rude person.
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3-04-2010 @ 12:06PM
Jo said...Hello again. :-)
One good way to eat is to follow the guidelines in this book. "Eat Right For Your Type." It's about eating correctly for your own blood type. I found it about ten years ago I believe, and it's worked fine for me. We are all different and react differently to what we eat. Look it up on google. It is a very interesting book! There is also a recipe book called "Cook Right For Your Type." I like them both.
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3-04-2010 @ 1:13PM
tuesday said...whatever happened to just being a kid
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3-04-2010 @ 1:17PM
bob said...i say eat cus you have one life to live. enjoy it. trans fat and the other bs what about thos ehwo don't care baout those huh? pizza and cheese steaks especially ones from philly are the best foods.
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