Starving themselves for purity’s sake

Uncategorized August 29th, 2009

British Dietetic Association

This from the UK’s Guardian newspaper, the newspaper of choice for the green ethically obsessed:

Eating disorder charities are reporting a rise in the number of people suffering from a serious psychological condition characterised by an obsession with healthy eating.

The condition, orthorexia nervosa, affects equal numbers of men and women, but sufferers tend to be aged over 30, middle-class and well-educated.

The condition was named by a Californian doctor, Steven Bratman, in 1997, and is described as a “fixation on righteous eating”. Until a few years ago, there were so few sufferers that doctors usually included them under the catch-all label of “Ednos” – eating disorders not otherwise recognised. Now, experts say, orthorexics take up such a significant proportion of the Ednos group that they should be treated separately.

“I am definitely seeing significantly more orthorexics than just a few years ago,” said Ursula Philpot, chair of the British Dietetic Association’s mental health group. “Other eating disorders focus on quantity of food but orthorexics can be overweight or look normal. They are solely concerned with the quality of the food they put in their bodies, refining and restricting their diets according to their personal understanding of which foods are truly ‘pure’.”

Orthorexics commonly have rigid rules around eating. Refusing to touch sugar, salt, caffeine, alcohol, wheat, gluten, yeast, soya, corn and dairy foods is just the start of their diet restrictions. Any foods that have come into contact with pesticides, herbicides or contain artificial additives are also out.

The obsession about which foods are “good” and which are “bad” means orthorexics can end up malnourished. Their dietary restrictions commonly cause sufferers to feel proud of their “virtuous” behaviour even if it means that eating becomes so stressful their personal relationships can come under pressure and they become socially isolated.

Of course the link between the British Dietetic Association’s own propaganda on organic food has yet to been seen by a fully qualified dieticians, such as the ludicrous “5 portions of fruit and vegetables a day” recommendation which prevents no cancer at all but does cause people to gain weight through all the fruit sugars they ingest leading to insulin resistance and worse.

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2 Comments

  1. Morons. Well, if there is no bread, let them refuse to eat cake.

  2. It really tells something about guilt and especially guilt-by-association that the Western middle classes appear to be drowning in. It wasn’t too long ago that a 17-year-old boy was in psychiatric care because he was convinced that by eating and drinking he was taking food and drink away from someone else in the Third World.

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