When healthy eating becomes unhealthy: orthorexia – Patch.com

Healthy eating is a bedrock of healthy living. It can help people maintain a healthy weight, ward off diseases and boost energy.

Could a healthy-eating habit reach a point where it's an unhealthy obsession?

Experts are increasingly looking at a disorder known as orthorexia, or an obsession with healthy eating, particularly during the coronavirus pandemic.

It's not recognized in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Psychiatric Disorders, but experts say it's becoming more common. Orthorexia starts out as a focus on healthy eating, but morphs into an unhealthy fixation on food quality.

The focus on food quality sets orthorexia apart from eating disorders such as anorexia and bulimia, which tend to have more of a focus on quantity of food consumed.

While it begins as a healthy trend, those with orthorexia can become so restrictive in their choice of food that it can lead to nutritional deficiencies and lowered quality of life.

People with orthorexia can get frustrated when their eating plan is thwarted, feel guilt and self-loathing when they go off their strict schedule, and spend a significant amount of time planning meals and researching food.

Watch for these warning signs of orthorexia:

Social media and the "clean eating" trend can push people toward orthorexia. It's a difficult-to-diagnose disorder, as those with it appear to be living a healthy lifestyle. Some with orthorexia focus on eating only organic foods. Some eliminate all sugar, fat and salt. Often the person eats an increasingly restrictive diet.

A combination of therapy and education can help people recover from orthorexia.

Linden Oaks Behavioral Health is known throughout the Chicago area for its comprehensive eating disorder services, which provide group therapy, individual/family therapy, nutrition education and exercise counseling to help individuals address complex psychological issues while treating physical and dietary needs. For more information, visit http://www.EEHealth.org/services/behavioral-health.

For updates on COVID-19, check EEHealth.org/coronavirus.

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When healthy eating becomes unhealthy: orthorexia - Patch.com

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