Resumen :
El Realfooding promueve un estilo de vida que rechaza los alimentos ultraprocesados,
además de tratar de propiciar una alimentación saludable, defendiendo la “comida real”
(“realfood”). Se considera que este movimiento puede promover conductas alimentarias de
riesgo. Es por ello que el objetivo de este estudio fue examinar la relación existente entre el
movimiento Realfooding y las actitudes alimentarias características de los trastornos de la
conducta alimentaria (TCA), la Ortorexia Nerviosa (ON) y la autoestima.
Se trata de un estudio transversal en el que participaron 248 estudiantes universitarios
españoles, 189 mujeres, 51 hombres y 2 personas de género no binario, con una edad
media de 21,49 años (DT= 2,37). Se administró un cuestionario sobre datos
sociodemográficos, el Eating Attitudes Test (EAT-26), el cuestionario ORTO-11-Es, la Escala
de Autoestima de Rosenberg (RSE) y un cuestionario sobre Realfooding ad-hoc.
El 42,1% de los participantes seguían en Instagram alguna cuenta que publicaba contenidos
relacionados con el Realfooding. Los grupos con mayor riesgo de ON y de TCA mostraron
puntuaciones significativamente superiores en Realfooding frente a los grupos de menor
riesgo, así como una relación positiva y significativa entre estos trastornos y el Realfooding.
Los resultados encontrados sugieren una relación entre el seguimiento de este movimiento
y el desarrollo de actitudes alimentarias de riesgo, sobre todo en mujeres.
Realfooding promotes a lifestyle that rejects ultra-processed foods, in addition to trying to
promote healthy eating, defending the "real food". It is considered that this movement can
promote risky eating behaviors. That is why the objective of this study was to examine the
relationship of the Realfooding movement with attitudes characteristic of eating disorders,
Orthorexia Nervosa (ON) and self-esteem, taking into account the gender variable.That is
why the objective of this study was to examine the relationship between the Realfooding
movement and eating attitudes characteristic of eating disorders (ED), Orthorexia Nervosa
(ON) and self-esteem.
This is a cross-sectional study in which 248 Spanish university students participated, 189
women, 51 men and 2 people of non-binary gender, with a mean age of 21.49 years (SD=
2.37). There were administered a questionnaire on sociodemographic data, the Eating
Attitudes Test (EAT-26), the ORTO-11-Es questionnaire, the Rosenberg Self-Esteem Scale
(RSE) and an ad-hoc Realfooding questionnaire.
42.1% of the participants followed an account on Instagram that published content related to
Realfooding. The groups with the highest risk of ON and eating disorders showed
significantly higher scores in Realfooding compared to the lower risk groups, as well as a
positive and significant relationship between these disorders and Realfooding.
The results found suggest a relationship between following this movement and the
development of risky eating attitudes, especially in women.
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