The Mental Health of Eating Healthy
Lisa Dorfman, a registered dietitian and the director of sports nutrition and performance at the University of Miami, says that she often sees children who are terrified of foods that are deemed “bad” by parents. “It’s almost a fear of dying, a fear of illness, like a delusional view of foods in general,” she said. “I see kids whose parents have hypnotized them. I have 5-year-olds that speak like 40-year-olds. They can’t eat an Oreo cookie without being concerned about trans fats.”
Dr. Steven Bratman of Denver has come up with a term to describe people obsessed with health food: orthorexia. Orthorexic patients, he says, are fixated on “righteous eating” (the word stems from the Greek word ortho, meaning straight and correct).
“I would tell them, ‘You’re addicted to health food.’ It was my way of having them not take themselves so seriously,” said Dr. Bratman, who published a book on the subject, “Health Food Junkies,” in 2001.
The condition, he says, may begin in homes where there is a preoccupation with “health foods.”
New York Times story HERE
another story w/video HERE
The Orthorexic Foodie blog HERE
Book: Health Food Junkies available HERE
Dr. Steven Bratman of Denver has come up with a term to describe people obsessed with health food: orthorexia. Orthorexic patients, he says, are fixated on “righteous eating” (the word stems from the Greek word ortho, meaning straight and correct).
“I would tell them, ‘You’re addicted to health food.’ It was my way of having them not take themselves so seriously,” said Dr. Bratman, who published a book on the subject, “Health Food Junkies,” in 2001.
The condition, he says, may begin in homes where there is a preoccupation with “health foods.”
New York Times story HERE
another story w/video HERE
The Orthorexic Foodie blog HERE
Book: Health Food Junkies available HERE
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]
<< Home