Skip to main content

To: Wes Streeting, Secretary of State for Health & Social Care

Lives are being lost. Eating disorders need action!

Urgently deliver a national Eating Disorder Strategy 

Why is this important?

For too long people with eating disorders have been failed. For too long people with eating disorders have been neglected.
  
We are calling on the Government for a standalone eating disorder strategy.
  
Eating disorders are among the most serious and life-threatening mental illnesses yet they have been overlooked and underfunded for far too long. As a result, they now have one of the largest treatment gaps in modern healthcare.

In the past decade, eating disorders have risen at an alarming rate, a crisis that worsened during the COVID-19 pandemic.
  
Right now, too many people are waiting for help. Too many are being turned away. Too many are deteriorating while services are stretched beyond breaking point.

Eating disorders do not discriminate. They affect people of all ages, genders, and ethnic backgrounds. Yet public understanding remains narrow, and services fail to reflect the true scale and diversity of need.

Binge Eating Disorder is now significantly more common than anorexia, yet there are still no dedicated NHS treatment pathways for it in many areas. Children as young as four are being diagnosed with ARFID and are unable to access specialist support. Families are being left to cope alone. Clinicians are trying to save lives in systems that are underfunded, under-resourced and overwhelmed.

Lives are being lost. Families are being torn apart. The human and financial cost of inaction is devastating.

We urgently need a comprehensive, properly funded, cross-government National Eating Disorder Strategy that:
  • Delivers an Inquiry to urgently review the current services and why people are dying or getting worse in treatment
  • Guarantees timely access to specialist treatment for people of all ages
  • Provides dedicated support for all eating disorder diagnoses, including Binge Eating Disorder and ARFID
  • Invests in early intervention and prevention
  • Addresses workforce shortages and ensures proper training
  • Tackles inequalities in access and outcomes
  • Commits to long-term, sustainable funding
  • Treats eating disorders as the public health emergency they are.
  • Ensures treatment models are disability and neurodiversity-informed

Category

Partner

Links

Updates

2026-04-16 12:32:06 +0100

1,000 signatures reached

2026-04-16 12:10:36 +0100

500 signatures reached

2026-04-16 12:00:11 +0100

100 signatures reached

2026-04-16 11:58:07 +0100

50 signatures reached

2026-04-16 11:57:13 +0100

25 signatures reached

2026-04-16 11:56:17 +0100

10 signatures reached