# Cross-cultural adaptation and psychometric properties of the Chinese version of the Orthorexia Beliefs Scale

**Authors:** Fan Yan, Xinzhang Sun, Hanqing Zhang

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2026.1729004 · Frontiers in Psychiatry · 2026-02-04

## TL;DR

This paper adapts and validates a Chinese version of a scale to measure unhealthy beliefs about healthy eating.

## Contribution

The study provides a culturally adapted and psychometrically validated Chinese version of the Orthorexia Beliefs Scale.

## Key findings

- The Chinese version of the Orthorexia Beliefs Scale (OBS-C) showed high content validity and strong internal consistency.
- Confirmatory factor analysis confirmed the three-factor structure with acceptable model fit in the Chinese sample.
- Test-retest reliability was satisfactory, with ICC values above 0.75.

## Abstract

Orthorexia nervosa refers to a pathological obsession with eating “pure” or “healthy” food, and researchers have emphasized the need for psychometrically sound instruments to assess underlying belief systems rather than behavioral outcomes. The Orthorexia Beliefs Scale (OBS) was developed for this purpose, but no validated Chinese version exists.

This study aimed to translate and culturally adapt the OBS into Chinese and to evaluate its psychometric properties, including reliability and construct validity, in a Chinese nonclinical sample.

The original OBS was translated following standard forward-backward translation procedures and refined through expert review and pilot testing. A total of 352 Chinese participants completed the questionnaire, which was randomly split into two subsamples (N1 = 152 for exploratory factor analysis; N2 = 200 for confirmatory factor analysis). Item analysis, internal consistency (Cronbach’s α, McDonald’s ω), content validity (CVI), exploratory factor analysis (EFA), and confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) were conducted.

Item–total correlations ranged from 0.46 to 0.64. Content validity indices (I-CVI) were high across items, and the scale-level S-CVI/Ave was 0.99. The EFA extracted three factors explaining 50.3% of variance, consistent with the original theoretical structure. CFA results showed acceptable model fit: χ²(167) = 265.66, p <.001, χ²/df = 1.59, CFI = 0.949, TLI = 0.942, RMSEA = 0.053 (90% CI [.041,.065], PCLOSE = 0.328). Cronbach’s α and ω were above 0.80 for the total scale and all subscales. Test–retest reliability (n = 30, two-week interval) yielded intraclass correlation coefficients (ICC) above 0.75.

The Chinese version of OBS (OBS-C) demonstrated strong reliability and validity in a nonclinical Chinese sample. It is a psychometrically sound instrument suited for assessing orthorexia-related belief systems in Chinese populations, laying a foundation for future research and interventions on orthorexia tendencies in China.

## Full-text entities

- **Genes:** LEP (leptin) [NCBI Gene 3952] {aka LEPD, OB, OBS}, TBCA (tubulin folding cofactor A) [NCBI Gene 6902]
- **Diseases:** F&amp;ED (OMIM:102510), psychological disorder (MESH:D000067073), mental health disorder (OMIM:603663), obsessive-compulsive personality disorder (MESH:D003193), OBS-C (MESH:D000088102), nutrition deficiencies (MESH:D044342), visual or cognitive impairments (MESH:D003072), Eating Disorders (MESH:D001068), AN (MESH:D000856), impaired social functioning (OMIM:300082), OCD (MESH:D009771), impairment (MESH:D060825), Mental Disorders (MESH:D001523), binge-eating disorder (MESH:D056912), anxiety disorders (MESH:D001008), bulimia nervosa (MESH:D052018)
- **Chemicals:** EFA (-)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

14 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12913363/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12913363