Patterns of implicit and explicit identity as a vegan or vegetarian in predicting healthy orthorexia and orthorexia nervosa.

IF 2.8 3区 医学 Q2 PSYCHIATRY
Ian P Albery, Rebecca Smith, Daniel Frings, Marcantonio Spada
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Abstract

Orthorexia nervosa (OrNe) is an eating disorder characterised by a pathological interest and preoccupation with healthy foods and a healthy diet. Evidence suggests that tendencies towards OrNe may be prevalent across diet groups, and this is particularly the case in vegans and vegetarians. Our previous work has identified that alongside individual differences in obsessive compulsiveness and perfectionism, cognitive biases (attentional preference for healthy-related cues) are associated with OrNe, whereas explicit identity (as a vegan/vegetarian) is only associated with a healthy orthorexia form. No work has assessed whether one's known identity (explicit identity) or that form of identity which is based on fast acting cognitive associations (implicit identity) further differentiate healthy orthorexia from OrNe tendencies in addition to compulsiveness and perfectionism. One hundred and forty-four self-identified vegans (n = 45), vegetarians (n = 50) and meat-eaters (omnivores) (n = 49) (66 females, 74 males, 4 non-binary; M age = 35.09) completed measures of current hunger status, obsessive compulsivity, perfectionism, the Teruel Orthorexia Scale, perceived identity centrality as a vegan/vegetarian (explicit identity) and a "self as vegan/vegetarian" implicit association test (implicit identity). Results showed increased orthorexia tendencies in both vegans and vegetarians compared to meat eaters (omnivores) but only in terms of healthy orthorexia. In addition, no differences were shown for OrNe suggesting the diet type is not influential in pathological orthorexia. Explicit identity and current hunger status were both shown to be associated with healthy orthorexia and not OrNe. Implicit identity as a vegan/vegetarian was unrelated to both dimensions, while compulsiveness and perfectionism predicted OrNe. Despite individuals implicitly associating the self with being a vegan/vegetarian, this identity does not serve as a maker of orthorexia nervosa.

素食者或素食者的内隐和外显身份模式预测健康的正食症和神经性正食症。
神经性正食症(OrNe)是一种以对健康食品和健康饮食的病理兴趣和关注为特征的饮食失调。有证据表明,在不同的饮食群体中,这种倾向可能普遍存在,在纯素食者和素食者中尤其如此。我们之前的工作已经确定,除了强迫症和完美主义的个体差异外,认知偏见(对健康相关线索的注意偏好)与OrNe有关,而明确的身份(作为素食主义者/素食主义者)只与健康的正常饮食形式有关。除了强迫性和完美主义外,还没有研究评估一个人的已知身份(显性身份)或基于快速反应认知联想的身份(内隐身份)是否进一步区分健康的正食症和OrNe倾向。144名自我认定为纯素食者(n = 45),素食者(n = 50)和肉食者(杂食者)(n = 49)(66名女性,74名男性,4名非二元;M年龄= 35.09)完成了当前饥饿状态、强迫症、完美主义、Teruel正常饮食量表、作为素食者/素食者的感知身份中心性(外显身份)和“作为素食者/素食者的自我”内隐联想测试(内隐身份)。结果显示,与肉食者(杂食动物)相比,素食者和素食者的正常饮食倾向都有所增加,但这只是在健康的正常饮食方面。此外,OrNe没有显示出差异,表明饮食类型对病理性正常饮食没有影响。外显身份和当前饥饿状态均与健康的正食症有关,而与OrNe无关。作为纯素食者/素食者的内隐身份与这两个维度无关,而强迫性和完美主义则预示着OrNe。尽管人们含蓄地将自己与素食主义者联系在一起,但这种身份并不会成为神经性厌食症的制造者。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.50
自引率
10.30%
发文量
170
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Eating and Weight Disorders - Studies on Anorexia, Bulimia and Obesity is a scientific journal whose main purpose is to create an international forum devoted to the several sectors of eating disorders and obesity and the significant relations between them. The journal publishes basic research, clinical and theoretical articles on eating disorders and weight-related problems: anorexia nervosa, bulimia nervosa, subthreshold eating disorders, obesity, atypical patterns of eating behaviour and body weight regulation in clinical and non-clinical populations.
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