Pediatric Orthorexia Nervosa

Children with orthorexia nervosa have an obsession with healthy eating that can impact their health and well-being. At Children’s Health, we don’t talk about foods as “unhealthy” or “healthy.” Instead, we can help your child reduce anxiety and learn to enjoy food, while teaching them about nutrition and the importance of finding balance.

What is Pediatric Orthorexia Nervosa?

Children who have orthorexia nervosa are obsessed with eating only “healthy” foods. They may become so focused on eating “clean,” “healthy” or “pure” foods that it can contribute to serious anxiety. Children with this condition may feel anxious about every meal, become stressed when foods they perceive as “healthy” aren’t available and may lose lots of weight.

Orthorexia nervosa is common in children with eating disorders, which are conditions where people engage in eating behaviors that negatively impact their health. This includes:

  • Anorexia, a condition where children significantly limit their food intake to lose weight
  • Bulimia, a condition where kids have patterns of binge eating (eating way too much) and purging (throwing up or doing excessive exercise to avoid gaining weight)

Pediatric Orthorexia Nervosa Doctors and Providers

Children’s Health℠ has a team of doctors, licensed clinical therapists, dietitians, nurses, psychologists and psychiatrists who can help your child.

Frequently Asked Questions

  • Why are children becoming obsessed with eating pure or healthy foods?

    If your child wants to eat a diet that includes healthy foods or foods that are good for them, that’s terrific. It becomes a problem when children develop an obsession with eating only “healthy” foods, and it causes them to lose too much weight and feel anxious about eating.

    Several factors play a role in this obsessive behavior: Children have access to a lot of information about food that may not be true through social media and TV. Many food companies promote their foods as clean, raw and organic. This can shape children’s beliefs that some foods are “good” and others are “bad.”

    Having this information doesn’t cause someone to become obsessive about food. But for some children who may be self-critical, anxious or prone to worry, these messages might make them feel like the only way to be “healthy” is to limit their diet to “healthy” foods.

  • What are the warning signs of orthorexia?

    Young children and teens with orthorexia often show the five following signs:

    • Obsessively thinking about food
    • Weight loss
    • Constantly preparing food
    • Not enjoying everyday life because they are so worried about food
    • Irrational thoughts about food, such as feeling extreme guilt for eating something they think is “unhealthy”
    • Regularly worried about the “quality” of food to the point that they may only want their parents to shop at certain grocery stores or eat at certain restaurants