| Literature DB >> 34065506 |
Antoni Niedzielski1,2, Natalia Kaźmierczak-Wojtaś1.
Abstract
The aim of this article is to present the up-to-date diagnostic tools of orthorexia and markers of its prevalence on the basis of the available literature. The authors searched PubMedCentral (PMC) and Google Scholar with the search entry of "orthorexia", "orthorexia nervosa", and "orthorexicbehaviours". We describe the tools of evaluation of orthorexicbehaviour (i.e., orthorexia self-test-BOT, the ORTO-15 questionnaire, Eating Habits Questionnaire-EHQ, Düsseldorf Orthorexia Scale-DOS, Teruel Orthorexia Scale-TOS, Barcelona Orthorexia Scale-BOS, and Orthorexia Nervosa Inventory-ONI), and offer a review of the studies on orthorexia nervosa. We conclude that there are no reliable data regarding the prevalence of orthorexia nervosa. The available studies point to significant differences in the prevalence depending on the value of cut-off points and tools used. The prevalence varies across countries and across populations, ranging from 6.9% in the Italian population to 88.7% in the group of Brazilian students of dieting. Thus, it indicates that some groups seem to be susceptible to the risk of ON more than others. It is a challenge to determine the prevalence of orthorexia, and any obtained results should be treated with caution. Consequently, we claim that the use of the ORTO-15 questionnaire to diagnose orthorexia is questionable due to a high percentage of falsely positive results.Entities:
Keywords: ORTHO-15; eating disorders; orthorexia nervosa; prevalence; tools
Year: 2021 PMID: 34065506 PMCID: PMC8160773 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph18105488
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Characteristics of the tools used for ON diagnosis.
| Tool | Authors | Year | Country | Number of Items | Structure | Reliability | Responses | Score |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Bratman, Knight [ | 2000 | USA | 10 | - | - | A dichotomic format of the responses | range: 0–10 |
|
ORTO-15 | Donini et al. [ | 2004, | Italy | 15 | Three factors related to eating habits are: rational—items 1, 5, 6, 11, 12, 14 clinical—items 3, 7, 8, 9, 15 emotional—items 2, 4, 10, 13 | - | 4-point Likert scale (neversometimes–often–always) | range: 15–60 pts |
|
ORTO-11 | Arusoğlu et al. [ | 2008 | Turkey | 11; | One-factor structure of the tool | 0.62 | range: 0–44 pts | |
| Fidan et al. [ | 2010 | - | - | the cut-off point for ORTO-11 | ||||
|
ORTO-12 | Alvarenga | 2012 | Brazil | 12; | Threefold structure of the tool: factor 1—items 3, 7, 11, 13 factor 2—items 4, 6, 10, 12, 14 factor 3—items 5, 8, 9 | 0.39 | range 12–48 pts | |
|
Polish version of ORTHO-15 | Brytek-Matera | 2014 | Poland | 9; | Twofold structure of the tool: factor 1—items 4, 5, 6, 10, 11, 12 factor 2—items 3, 7, 14 | 0.644 | range: 9–36 pts | |
| Stochel et al. [ | 2015 | Poland | 15 | - | 0.77 | range: 15–60 pts | ||
|
ORTO-11-Hu | Varga et al. [ | 2014 | Hungary | 11; | One-factor structure of the tool; | 0.82 | range: 11–44 | |
|
ORTO-9-GE | Missbach et al. [ | 2015 | Germany | 9; | One-factor structure of the tool; | 0.67 | range: 9–36 pts | |
|
ORTO-15 | Barnes, Caltabiano [ | 2017 | Australia | 9; | - | 0.73 | range 9–36 pts | |
| Moller et al. [ | 2018 | Australia | 7; | One-factor structure of the tool; | 0.83 | range 7–28 pts | ||
|
ORTO-11-ES | Parra-Fernandez et al. [ | 2018 | Spain | 11; | Three-factor structure of the tool: rational—items 1, 4, 6, 13 behavioral—items 2, 3, 7 emotional—items 9, 10, 11, 12 | 0.8 | range 11–44 pts | |
|
ORTO-12-FR | Babeau et al. [ | 2019 | France | 12; | Three-factor structure of the tool: rational—items 1, 11, 12, 14 behavioral—items3, 7, 9, 15 emotional—items 2, 4, 10, 13 | 0.73 | - the cut-off point for ON has not been established | |
|
ORTO-6 | Kaźmierczak-Wojtaś [ | 2019 | Poland | 6; | - | 0.696 | ON—6–7 pts | |
|
ORTO-10 | Mohamed Halim et al. [ | 2020 | Australia | items deleted: | - | 0.76 | - the cut-off point for ON has not been established | |
|
| Gleaves, Graham, Ambwani [ | 2013 | USA | 21 | Three-factor structure of the tool: healthy eating behaviours problems associated with healthy eating feeling positively about healthy eating | EHQ knowledge—0.82 | 4-point Likert scale: | the higher the result, the bigger probability of ON. |
|
EHQ | Oberle et al. [ | 2017 | USA | 21 | Three-factor structure of the tool: healthy eating behaviours problems associated with healthy eating - feeling positively about healthy eating | 0.9 | ||
|
EHQ | Brytek-Matera et al. [ | 2018 | Poland | 21 | Three-factor structure of the tool: healthy eating behaviours problems associated with healthy eating feeling positively about healthy eating | EHQ knowledge—0.81 | ||
|
EHQ | Mohamed Halim et al. [ | 2020 | Australia | 21 | Four-factor structure of the tool factor 1—Healthy Eating Cognitions—items 2, 8, 10, 16, 17, 18 factor 2 —Dietary Restriction—items 11, 12, 15 factor 3—Diet Superiority items 3, 7, 9, 13, 14, 19, 21 factor 4—Social impairment | 0.89 | ||
|
| Barthels, Meyer, Pietrowsky [ | 2015 | Germany | 21 | Longer version—3 subscales: orthorexic eating behavior, avoidance of additives, supply of minerals orthorexic eating behavior | 0.91 | 4-point Likert scale: | range 21–84 pts |
|
(E)-DOS | Chard et al. [ | 2019 | USA | 10 |
One-factor structure of the tool; | 0.882 | 4-point Likert scale: from “this applies to me“ (4 points) to “this does not apply to me” (1 point) | range—10–40 pts |
|
C-DOS | He et al. [ | 2019 | China | 10 | Three-factor structure was revealed for the C-DOS; Obsession in healthy food, Adherence to strict nutrition rules, Emotional symptoms. | 0.84 | 4-point Likert scale: “definitely does not apply to me“to “definitely applies to me” | range—10–40 pts |
|
DOS-ES | Parra-Fernández et al. [ | 2019 | Spain | 10 | - | 0.841 | 4-point Likert scale: | range—10–40 pts |
|
| Bauer et al. [ | 2019 | Spain | 64 | 6 areas have been distinguished: rational; emotional behavioral; negative for health; negative consequences for social or academic functioning; differential diagnosis. | - | - | - |
|
| Barrada, Roncero [ | 2018 | Spain | 17 | 2-factor model: healthy orthorexia (HeOr)—9 items orthorexia nervosa (OrNe)—8 items | HeOr—0.85 | 4-point Likert scale, from 0 = definitely disagree to 3 = definitely agree | range: |
|
| Oberle, | 2020 | USA | 24 | Three-factor structure of the tool: physical and social impairment—10 items behaviour and absorption—9 items emotional stress—5 items | 0.94 | 4-point Likert scale: | range—24–96 |
AGFI—adjusted goodness of fit index;CFI—comparative fit index;CMIN/DF—Chi-square mean/degree of freedom; GFI—goodness-of-fit index;PCLOSE—p (probability) of close fit;RMSEA— root mean square error of approximation;SRMR—standardized root mean square residual;TLI—Tucker–Lewis Index.
Studies on ON prevalence.
| Study: | Material: | Methods: | Prevalence (%) | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Authors | Year | Country | Studied Group | Number of Patients | Tool | Reliability | ||
| Donini et al. [ | 2004 | Italy | subjects with various different occupational characteristics | 404 | F = 236 | ORTO-15 | no data | Development of a novel tool for ON diagnosis ORTO-15 range 40 pts |
| Kinzl et al. [ | 2006 | Germany | female dieticians | 283 | F = 283 | BOT | no data | Orthorexia nervosa—12.8 |
| BaǧciBosi et al. [ | 2007 | Turkey | resident medical doctors of the Faculty of Medicine | 318 | F = 149 | ORTO-15 | no data | ORTO-15 range 40 pts—45.5 |
| Arusoğlu et al. [ | 2008 | Turkey | academic and administrative personel from Hacettepe University | 944 | F = 578 | ORTO-11; | 0.62 | Tool adaptation |
| Aksoydan, Camci [ | 2009 | Turkey | performance artists, opera singers, ballet dancers, and symphony orchestra musicians | 94 | F = 55 | ORTO-15 | ORTO-15 range 40 pts | |
| Fidan et al. [ | 2010 | Turkey | Turkish medical students | 878 | F = 359 | ORTO-11 | 0.62 | Cut-off points for ORTO-11–27 pts |
| McInerney-Ernst [ | 2011 | USA | undergraduate students at the University of Missouri-Kansas City (UMKC). | 163 | F = 58.0 | ORTO-15 | 0.14 | ORTO-15 |
| Ramacciotti et al. [ | 2011 | Italy | general population | 177 | no data | ORTO-15 | no data | ORTO-15 |
| Alvarenga et al. [ | 2012 | Brazil | Brazilian dietitians | 392 | F = 380 | ORTO-12; | 0.39 | ORTO-12 range 40 pts—81.9 |
| Segura-García | 2012 | Italy | athletes (taekwondo, boxing, judo, body building, volleyball, basketball, soccer, aerobics, and aqua fitness); 217 sedentary matched controls | 577 | F = 189 | ORTO-15 | 0.81 | ORTO-15 range 35 pts |
| Barthels [ | 2014 | Germany | users of social networks, internet fora, emails | 1307 | F = 904 | DOS | 0.84 | Orthorexia nervosa |
| Bo et al. [ | 2014 | Italy | Students of: Dietetics, Biology, Exercise and Sport Sciences at the University of Turin | 440 | no data | ORTO-15 | no data | ORTO-15 range 35 pts |
| Brytek-Matera | 2014 | Poland | men and women, age 18–35 university students, administrative and teaching personel | 400 | F = 341 | Polish version of ORTHO-15; | 0.64 | tool adaptation |
| de Souza, Rodrigues [ | 2014 | Brazil | Nutrition students | 150 | F = 150 | ORTO-15 | no data | ORTO-15 range 40 pts |
| Herranz Valera | 2014 | Spain | ashtanga yoga practitioners | 136 | F = 89 | ORTO-15 | no data | ORTO-15 range 40 pts |
| Neyman et al. [ | 2014 | USA | students | 448 | F = 353 | ORTO-15 | no data | ORTO-15 range 40 pts—81 |
| Varga et al. [ | 2014 | Hungary | students: | 810 | F = 724 | OTRO-11-Hu; | 0.82 | tool adaptation ORTO-11-Hu range 40 pts |
| Asil, Sürücüoğlu [ | 2015 | Turkey | Turkish dieticians | 117 | F = 101 | ORTO-15 | no data | ORTO-15 range 40 pts |
| Barthels et al. [ | 2015 | Germany | 1340 people | 1340 | DOS | 0.84 | orthorexia nervosa—3.0 | |
| Brytek-Matera | 2015 | Poland | women diagnosed with EDs anorexia nervosa bulimia nervosa | 52 | F = 52 | Polish version of ORTHO-15 | 0.74 | Polish version of ORTO-15 |
| Brytek-Matera | 2015a | Poland | University students of Human Sciences (Psychology and Pedagogy) and Nutrition Sciences (Dietetics) from the Silesia, Lower Silesia, Mazovia, and Lublin Provinces in Poland | 327 | F = 283 | Polish version of ORTHO-15 | 0.64 | Polish version of ORTO-15 |
| Gubiec et al. [ | 2015 | Poland | Polish nutrition students | 155 | F = 140 | ORTO-15 | no data | ORTO-15 range 40 pts |
| Jerez et al. [ | 2015 | Chile | High school students | 205 | F = 94 | ORTO-15 | b.d. | ORTO-15 range 40 pts |
| Missbach et al. [ | 2015 | Germany | Participants were recruited via online advertisement (social media, email distribution lists) and we collected data online | 1029 | F = 768 | ORTO-9-GE; | 0.67 | tool validation |
| Özkan et al. [ | 2015 | Turkey | Trakya University Medical School undergraduate students | 676 | F = 420 | ORTO-11 | no data. | Group 1—high risk of ON |
| Segura-García | 2015 | Italy | patients diagnosed with EDs: anorexia nervosa (AN) bulimia nervosa (BN) control group (healthy participants) | 32 | F = 64 | ORTO-15 | 0.81 | ORTO-15 range 35 pts |
| Stochel et al. [ | 2015 | Polska | Polish high school students | 399 | F = 253 | ORTO-15 | 0.77 | ORTO-15 range 40 pts |
| Bundros et al. [ | 2016 | USA | a convenience sample of California State University students | 448 | F = 325 | BOT | no data | healthy eating fixation or orthorexia nervosa |
| Dell’Osso et al. [ | 2016 | Italy | students and University employees belonging to University of Pisa | 2826 | F = 1148 | ORTO-15 | no data | ORTO-15 range 35 pts |
| Dittfeld et al. [ | 2016 | Poland | Students: dietetic students physiotherapy students. | 430 | F = 393 | BOT | no data. | healthy eating fixation D —26.6 F—14.9 |
| Farooq, Bradbury [ | 2016 | Great Britain | University students who either represented their university competitively in sport or participated for leisure purposes | 213 | K = 84 | ORTO-15 | no data | ORTO-15 range 35 pts |
| Hyrnik et al. [ | 2016 | Poland | high school students | 1899 | K = 992 (52.5) | ORTO-15 | no data | ORTO-15 |
| Sanlier et al. [ | 2016 | Turkey | physical and mathematical sciences, | 900 | K = 522 (58.0) | ORTO-15 | 0.71 | ORTO-15 range 40 pts |
| Arslantaş et al. [ | 2017 | Turkey | nursing students | 181 | K = 141 (77.9) | ORTO-11 | 0.64 | ORTO-11 range 27 pts |
| Barnes, Caltabiano [ | 2017 | Australia | Participants aged 17–62; first and second year psychology students at James Cook University; respondents were recruited from Facebook | 220 | K = 174 | ORTO-15 (9 items); | 0.73 | a new version of ORTO-15 |
| Bień, Pieczykolan [ | 2017 | Poland | women, age 18–35 | 280 | F = 280 | ORTO-15 | b.d. | ORTO-15 range 40 pts |
| Depa et al. [ | 2017 | Germany | students from the University of Hohenheim: students of nutrition science (NS) economics (ES) students; | 456 | F = 318 | DOS | 0.91 | Orthorexia nervosa |
| Dittfeld et al. [ | 2017 | Poland | participants, age 11–70 | 2611 | BOT | no data | orthorexia nervosa | |
| Dunn et al. [ | 2017 | USA | 275 US college students | 275 | F = 188 (68.0) | ORTO-15 | no data | ORTO-15 |
| Gramaglia | 2017 | Poland, | female patients with anorexia nervosa (AN) and healthy controls (HC) from Italy and Poland: those with anorexia nervosa from Poland control group from Poland those with anorexia nervosa from Italy control group from Italy | 136 | F = 136 | ORTO-15 | no data | ORTO-15 range 40 pts |
| Hayles et al. [ | 2017 | USA | undergraduate students at a southeastern U.S. 4-year university. | 404 | F = 334 | ORTO-15 | no data | ORTO-15 range 40 pts |
| Kaźmierczak | 2017 | Polska | users of internet fora dedicated to health, eating, and foods | 155 | F = 136 (87.74) | ORTO-15 | no data | ORTO-15 range 40 pts |
| Malmborg | 2017 | Sweden | undergraduate students | 207 | F = 117 | ORTO-15 | no data | ORTO-15 |
| Rudolph et al. [ | 2017 | Germany | The sample was recruited among university students who were active members of the university fitness center | 759 | F = 538 | DOS | 0.84 | orthorexia nervosa |
| Tremelling et al. [ | 2017 | USA (online study) | dieticians | 636 | F = 615 | ORTO-15 | no data | 49.5 |
| Turner, Lefevre [ | 2017 | online study | Participants were recruited via not-paid-for advertisements on Instagram, Facebook, and Twitter, as well as the blog “Plantbased Pixie”and the “Heath Bloggers Community“ newsletter | 680 | F = 680 | ORTO-15 | no data | ORTO-15 |
| Almeida, | 2018 | Portugal | members of two gyms in the city of Coimbra (Portugal) | 193 | F = 113 | ORTO-15 | 0.7 | ORTO-15 range 40 pts |
| Andreas et al. [ | 2018 | Germany | clinic for Psychosomatic Medicine in Bad Bramstedt | 1122 | F = 788 | Ortho-10 | 0.79 | tool adaptation |
| Barthels et al. [ | 2018 | Germany | vegetarians and vegans: vegans, vegetarians, rare meat consumption, frequent meat consumption; Sample of dieting individuals “diet with dietary change“, “diet without dietary change” “no diet/control group“ | 351 | F = 221 | DOS | 0.83 | orthorexia nervosa vegans—7.9 vegetarians—3.8 those rarely eating meat—3.6 those often eating meat—0 those on a diet—6.7 those on a diet changing their eating habits—2.7 control group—1.5 |
| Dell’Osso et al. [ | 2018 | Italy | students from the University of Pisa, Italy | 2130 | F = 1274 (58.9) | ORTO-15 | no data | ORTO-15 range 35 pts |
| Gkiouras et al. [ | 2018 | Greece | female dietetics students from the Department of Nutrition and Dietetics, in Thessaloniki. | 120 | F = 120 | BOT | no data | orthorexia nervosa—62.9 |
| Grammatiko-poulou et al. [ | 2018 | Greece | undergraduate students of the Department of | 176 | F = 140 | BOT | no data | orthorexia nervosa—68.2 |
| Karaçıl Ermumcu, Acar Tek [ | 2018 | Turkey | women aged between 20–54 years. | 132 | F = 132 | ORTO-15 | no data | ORTO-15 range 40 pts |
| Moller et al. [ | 2018 | Australia | social media users, students | 585 | F = 482 (82.4) | ORTO-7; | 0.83 | a new version of ORTO-15—range 19 pts |
| Parra-Fernandez et al. [ | 2018, | Spain | the University of Castilla-La Mancha | 454 | F = 295 | ORTO-11-ES; | 0.8 | tool adaptation and validation |
| Reynolds [ | 2018 | Australia | staff and students at the University of New South Wales, Sydney | 92 | F = 67 (73.0) | ORTO-15 | no data | ORTO-15 |
| Rudolph [ | 2018 | Germany | active members of three German professional fitness clubs | 1008 | F = 449 | DOS | 0.84 | orthorexia nervosa—4.3 |
| Strahler et al. [ | 2018 | Germany | people aged 18–75 | 713 | F = 569 | DOS | 0.87 | orthorexia nervosa—3.8 |
| Agopyan et al. [ | 2019 | Turkey | female students of the Health Sciences Faculty, Department of Nutrition and Dietetics of a private university in Istanbul | 136 | F = 136 | ORTO-11 | 0.62 | ORTO-11 range 27 pts |
| Aslan, Aktürk [ | 2019 | Turkey | Women; patients diagnosed with breast cancer women who hadnot been diagnosed with cancer | 402 | K = 402 | ORTO-15 | 0.79 | ORTO-15 range 33 pts |
| Babeau et al. [ | 2019 | France | French individuals, the minimum age was 18 years old, and the | 768 | F = 651 | ORTO-12-FR; | 0.73 | tool validation |
| Barthels et al. [ | 2019 | Germany |
Patients and healthy control group Patients who were diagnosed with somatoform disorders; The control group consisted of 30 healthy adults matched with regard to gender, age, and educational levels to the patient sample | 61 | F = 17 | DOS | 0.86 | orthorexia nervosa patients—6.67 control group—0 |
| Bert et al. [ | 2019 | Italy | The sample was recruited among participants (athletes and audience) in local sports events, in particular cyclosportive, running, and walking competitions. | 549 | F = 139 (25.5) | ORTO-15 | no data | ORTO-15 range 40 pts |
| Chard et al. [ | 2019 | USA | undergraduate students; | 384 | F = 267 | (E)-DOS | 0.882 | orthorexia nervosa—8.0 students following a diet (vegetarianism, veganism, gluten-free diet) students with no diet |
| Clifford, Blyth [ | 2019 | Great Britain | Undergraduate and postgraduate students student athletes non-athlete controls | 215 | F = 141 | ORTO-15 | no data | ORTO-15 range 40 pts |
| Erkin, Göl [ | 2019 | Turkey | Yoga practitioners | 118 | F = 109 (92.4) | ORTO-11 | 0.86 | ORTO-11 range 27 pts |
| Farchakh et al. [ | 2019 | Liban | medical students | 627 | F = 316 | ORTO-15 | 0.73 | ORTO-15 range 40 pts |
| Gorrasi et al. [ | 2019 | Italy | Students from: the University of Turin, the University of Pavia, the University of Naples | 918 | F = (54.8) | ORTO-15 | 0.79 | ORTO-15 range 35 pts |
| Gramaglia et al. [ | 2019 | Italy, Poland, | Students from: Italy, Poland, Spain. | 664 | F = 400 | ORTO-15, | no data | ORTO-15 range 35 pts |
| Haddad et al. [ | 2019 | Liban | 806 community dwelling participantsusing a proportionate random sample from all Lebanese gvernorates (Beirut, Mount Lebanon, North, South, and Bekaa). | 806 | F = 536 (66.5) | ORTO-15 | 0.822 | ORTO-15 range 40 pts |
| He et al. [ | 2019 | China | Students from two universities in mainland | 1075 | F = 567 | C-DOS | 0.8 | orthorexia nervosa |
| Heiss et al. [ | 2019 | USA (online study) | participants were recruited via Facebook pages focused on vegetarianism and veganism, and other websites about food, psychology, and psychological research. | 381 | F = 308 (80.8) | ORTO-15 | 0.30–0.42 | ORTO-15 range 40 pts |
| Kaźmierczak-Wojtaś [ | 2019 | Poland | young people aged 16–35 | 473 | F = 331 (70.0) | ORTO-6 | 0.696 | ON—range 6-7 pts |
| Luck-Sikorski et al. [ | 2019 | Gernany | the German general public | 1007 | F = 489 | DOS | 0.80 | orthorexia nervosa |
| Łucka et al. [ | 2019, | Poland | school-age youth and young adults from Pomeranian and Warmian-Masurian voivodeships. | 864 | F = 599 | ORTHO-15 | no data | ORTO-15 |
| Parra-Fernández et al. [ | 2019a | Spain | students from Casilla la Mancha University, Spain | 492 | F = (56.9) | ORTO-11-ES | 0.84 | ORTO-11-ES range 25 |
| Plichta, Jeżewska-Zychowicz [ | 2019 | Poland | participants recruited from seven universities in Poland. | 1120 | F = 789 (70.4) | ORTHO-15 | 0.7 | ORTHO-15 |
| Oberle et al. [ | 2020 | USA | Texas State University students and social media users (Facebook, Instagram) | 847 | F = 692 | ONI | 0.94 | ONI—range 72 pts |
| Plichta, Jeżewska-Zychowicz [ | 2020 | Poland | Polish students | 1120 | F = 789 (70.4) | ORTO-15 | 0.7 | ORTO-15 range 35 pts |
F—female; M—male; BOT—Orthorexia self-test; ORTO-15—The ORTO-15 questionnaire; DOS—Düsseldorf Orthorexia Scale; ONI—Orthorexia Nervosa Inventory.