AI Article Synopsis

  • Eating disorders are serious and have high mortality rates, yet screening among vegetarians and vegans remains low; this study focuses on developing a new screening tool called the Vegetarian Vegan Eating Disorder Screener (V-EDS).
  • A mixed-methods approach was used, involving interviews and pilot testing, which led to a refined 18-item questionnaire that effectively assesses eating disorders in vegetarians and vegans.
  • The V-EDS demonstrated strong psychometric properties, indicating it could be a valuable resource for early intervention and treatment for individuals in these dietary groups experiencing eating disorders.

Article Abstract

Background: Eating disorders have one of the highest mortality of all mental illnesses but are associated with low rates of screening and early intervention. In addition, there remains considerable uncertainty regarding the use of current standardised screening tools in measuring eating pathology in vegetarians and vegans. With these groups presenting as potential at-risk groups for disordered eating development, the present study aimed to develop and preliminary validate a novel eating disorder screening tool, the Vegetarian Vegan Eating Disorder Screener (V-EDS).

Methods: We utilised a mixed-methods approach, comprising four phases.

Results: A conceptual framework was developed from 25 community, clinician, and lived experience interviews and used to derive a preliminary set of 163 items (Phase 1). Phase 2 piloted the items to establish face and content validity through cognitive debriefing interviews of 18 additional community, clinician, and lived experience participants, resulting in a reduced, revised questionnaire of 53 items. Phase 3 involved scale purification using Item Response Theory in analysis of 230 vegetarians and 230 vegans resulting in a further reduced 18-item questionnaire. Phase 4 validated the screening tool in a large community sample of 245 vegetarians and 405 vegans using traditional psychometric analysis, finding the V-EDS supports a unidimensional factor structure with excellent internal consistency (α = 0.95-0.96) and convergent validity (0.87-0.88), and moderate discriminate validity (0.45-0.55).

Conclusions: This study provided strong initial support for the psychometric validity and theoretical assumptions of the novel V-EDS screening tool. The V-EDS has the potential to increase early intervention rates for vegetarians and vegans experiencing eating disorder symptoms, further supporting advocacy and treatment approaches for these expanding dietary groups.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10775595PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s40337-024-00964-7DOI Listing

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