Just like fear of flying or fear of spiders, a fear of vomiting can be so strong that it becomes a phobia. The specific phobia of vomiting (SPOV), also referred to as emetophobia, is a serious clinical condition. The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 5th Edition (DSM-5) categorizes it as a specific phobia, “other” subtype. SPOV involves an intense and irrational fear of vomiting and the avoidance of situations related to vomiting. It can look a lot like an eating disorder, and often co-occurs with one. Many people with a problematic fear of vomiting seek treatment with eating disorder therapists or at eating disorder programs. Specific phobia of vomiting has not been well researched. It affects more females than males and commonly develops in childhood or adolescence. The average person with this condition is affected for 25 years before seeking treatment. Therapists generally regard SPOV as challenging to treat because of a high drop-out rate and a poor response to treatment. It can become one of the most impairing phobias because people with it come to avoid such a broad range of situations.
Symptoms
There are different factors that may indicate that you have a specific phobia of vomiting.
Sensations
A core symptom of SPOV is frequent nausea, an unpleasant sensation related to the gastrointestinal system. People with SPOV feel nauseated more often than people without the phobia. Most people with SPOV report feeling nauseated every one to two days, often for more than an hour at a time. The experience of nausea appears to be closely related to the intensity of the fear that people feel. Those with SPOV who experience more nausea also seem to lose more weight.
Thoughts
If you have SPOV, you are horrified at the idea of vomiting. You may also dread losing control and being ill. When you feel sick, you may obsessively have the thought, “I am going to vomit,” with a strong belief that you will. You may fear yourself vomiting and others around you vomiting. Most people with vomit phobia primarily fear themselves vomiting.
Behaviors
If you have SPOV, you might engage in a range of behaviors to try to reduce your likelihood of vomiting. These may include physically scanning your body for sensations and indications that you might vomit. You might also engage in safety-seeking and avoidance behaviors that include checking food expiration dates, avoiding alcohol, and avoiding certain foods like meat and seafood. These preventive behaviors can consume a great deal of worry and time.
Psychosocial Impairment
People with SPOV suffer significant impairment. It may interfere with work when you may take days off because you think someone in your office is sick. It may affect your social life when you avoid social gatherings where you believe there is an increased risk of vomiting. You may also avoid contact with children when they are ill or sleep in another room if your partner is sick or has been drinking.
Diagnosis
If your doctor suspects you have SPOV, your doctor will ask you questions about your symptoms and your medical history. Your doctor will also conduct a physical exam and may order lab tests to help rule out any medical conditions that might be contributing to your symptoms. There are two validated measures to assess for SPOV:
Specific Phobia of Vomiting Inventory (SPOVI)Emetophobia Questionnaire (EMETQ)
Relation to Other Disorders
Because specific fear of vomiting shares many features in common with other more well-understood illnesses, it has likely been under-recognized and misdiagnosed. Some disorders with similar symptoms include:
Illness anxiety disorder (formerly hypochondriasis) shares many similarities with SPOV, including worrying, reassurance-seeking, and checking behavior about possible infections or food poisoning that could lead to vomiting. The symptoms of SPOV can look like the compulsive handwashing or sanitizing observed in obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). Both SPOV and panic disorder are characterized by an over-focus on and fear of bodily sensations, which in turn intensifies the sensations. Some people with SPOV have some of the symptoms of social phobia, specifically fear of vomiting in social situations or of others judging them if they get sick.
Relation to Eating Disorders
While diagnoses of an eating disorder and SPOV can co-occur, there is limited research on how frequently this happens. Some studies point to an overlap:
In one study, people with SPOV had a significantly higher rate of abnormal and restrictive eating behaviors.Another study found that 80% of individuals with SPOV reported abnormal eating behavior and 61% reported food avoidance.Researchers also found that of 131 patients with SPOV, four were also diagnosed with anorexia nervosa.
People with SPOV often restrict food to reduce the risk of vomiting. As such, they may look a lot like patients with eating disorders. Namely, SPOV can look like avoidant restrictive intake disorder (ARFID), which the DSM-5 defines as an eating disorder in which individuals fail to meet their nutritional needs. However, people with ARFID do not have the typical body image concerns of individuals with anorexia nervosa. People with SPOV can also meet criteria for ARFID when there is an extreme fear of vomiting and eating is restricted and any one of the following conditions are met:
Dependence on tube feeding Psychosocial impairment Significant weight loss Significant nutritional deficiency
It also appears likely that some individuals with SPOV may be misdiagnosed with anorexia due to eating-disordered attitudes and behaviors that are driven by phobic fears rather than eating psychopathology. When making a differential diagnosis, clinicians must understand why a patient fears and avoids food: Is it because of fear of weight gain or fear of vomiting?
Causes
Phobias are believed to be caused by a complex interplay of genetic and environmental factors. There are believed to be several predisposing factors for SPOV. People who develop a fear of vomiting appear to have a general vulnerability to anxiety. They may tend to express anxiety through somatic symptoms such as “butterflies in the stomach” or nausea. Finally, they may have high disgust sensitivity. Many phobias involve some learned fear that activates these predisposing factors. Some traumatic incidents may have contributed to the phobia’s development. Many individuals with SPOV recall a triggering incident involving themselves or others vomiting. Some individuals recall no triggering incident. These may be cases of vicarious learning—for example, reading about an incident of vomiting or hearing someone else talk about vomiting in a fearful way.
Maintenance
The more people pay attention to gastrointestinal symptoms, the more likely they can perceive nausea. Some factors that play a role in maintaining the condition:
Anxiety
Those who experience anxiety physically can catastrophically misinterpret the benign signs of digestion as an indicator of upcoming nausea. This leads to increased anxiety, which heightens nausea. This feeling can be mistaken for the warning sign that vomiting is imminent.
Avoidance
Avoidance behaviors also maintain the phobia. People with SPOV often avoid specific foods out of fear of vomiting. Commonly avoided foods include meat, poultry, seafood and shellfish, foreign meals, dairy products, and fruits and vegetables. People may restrict the amount of food they eat to reduce sensations of fullness, which they fear could lead to vomiting. They may also restrict eating food in certain contexts, such as food cooked by other people. People with vomiting phobia may come to avoid a broad spectrum of situations:
Those they believe will increase their own risk of vomiting, such as eating from salad bars or buffets, visiting people in the hospital, eating at restaurants, public toilets, traveling, boats and airplanes, going to an amusement park, or meeting ill peopleThose where they believe they may see someone vomiting, such as events where guests drink alcohol, places where children play, or where they fear they may vomit in the presence of othersPregnancy—some have even chosen to terminate a pregnancy because of their fear of vomitingRecommended surgery
It should be noted that most of these situations would be associated with an extremely low risk of vomiting. As a result, people who avoid them fail to learn that these situations are not dangerous.
Safety Behaviors
People with SPOV develop safety behaviors they believe will reduce their likelihood of vomiting. They overestimate the efficacy of these measures in preventing vomiting. They may:
Take antacidsWear rubber glovesRepeatedly check the sell-by date and the freshness of foodWash their hands excessivelyInordinately clean the kitchen areaWash food excessively
Treatment
Research on treatment for SPOV is very limited. However, treatment options are similar to those of other specific phobias:
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) is the most widely used approach for the treatment of SPOV and other phobias. CBT treatment involves challenging anxiety-provoking thoughts and replacing them with more positive ones. It also includes discontinuing safety behaviors, such as wearing gloves and excessive cleaning. Although cognitive behavioral interventions would clearly be the focus, certain medications such as selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) might be helpful, particularly if there are other mood or anxiety symptoms.
Exposure Therapy
As with most phobias, exposure is a central aspect of the treatment. A key difference in the treatment of SPOV is that treatment does not usually include exposure to the exact situation—that is, making oneself vomit. Induction of vomiting via an emetic is not considered practical or safe, particularly when done repeatedly. Also, a single exposure might not be sufficient to reduce the aversion to vomiting. Treatment focuses instead on exposure to the sensations associated with vomiting, such as nausea, and the situations that trigger a fear of vomiting. Exposure to physical sensations involves inducing physiological symptoms that are similar to anxiety. For example, having a patient spin can often induce dizziness and sometimes nausea. Some CBT treatment models include imaginary re-scripting of past aversive experiences of vomiting. Some therapists use exposure to videos of others vomiting. Treatment should include exposure to all foods and situations that have been avoided. This is often done in a hierarchical fashion, with progressively scarier situations approached over time. Situations can be combined. For example, a person may eat a fear food and then go on a rollercoaster.
Psychoeducation
CBT for SPOV usually begins with psychoeducation about vomiting phobia, including a cognitive model of anxiety emphasizing the interplay of cognitive, physical, and behavioral factors. Patients should be educated about factors that maintain the disorder and the importance of exposure in the treatment. You may be reassured to learn that:
Vomiting is a normal and adaptive process, designed to save your life by ridding your body of something you have ingested that is contaminated or poisonous.All mammals except rats vomit (which is why rat poison is effective).You cannot prevent yourself from vomiting. It is a primitive reflex that cannot be inhibited.Nausea is only rarely an indication of vomiting.Food safety standards, refrigeration, and sanitation have substantially reduced the instance of vomiting in the developed world; one study found that most people can recall vomiting about four to six times over their lifetime.
Weight Restoration
If the patient is at a low weight, then weight gain and restoration of normal patterns of eating in SPOV is an important treatment goal, just as it is in anorexia nervosa. Family-based treatment focused on nutritional restoration and exposure may be a good treatment choice for adolescents with SPOV needing to restore weight.
A Word From Verywell
It is common to feel reluctant about seeking help. If you (or a loved one) have a severe fear of vomiting, it is important to receive an assessment leading to an accurate diagnosis. Then you can begin the process of recovery.