Supporting mental health teams across
England to implement an early intervention model in eating disorder services.
Evidence from research studies suggests that treatment
outcomes are best if the condition is identified and treated at the earliest
opportunity, within the first three years of illness. 30% of young people
referred for eating disorders treatment wait over 18 weeks and another 34% wait
over six months. Most of these people see their condition worsen whilst
waiting. Resources to treat eating disorders are particularly stretched for
adults (age 18 and over) and access to evidence-based treatment and care is
often delayed until patients show considerable deterioration, causing distress
to individuals and families and greater costs to the NHS.
This national
programme aims to:
• Ensure earlier intervention and treatment of eating
disorders in young people
• Reduce the duration of
untreated eating disorders in young people
• Reduce waiting times and
day/inpatient admissions
• Improve clinical
outcomes
• Reduce use of healthcare
services, in particular reduce the need for inpatient or day-patient admissions.
The outcomes above will be
achieved by supporting eating disorder services to implement
evidence-based models. One approach is the FREED (First
episode Rapid Early intervention for Eating Disorders) model, developed by
South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust and King’s College London. FREED
is an innovative, evidence-based, specialist care package for 16 to
25-year-olds with a first episode eating disorder of less than 3 years
duration.
The FREED model:
• Overcomes barriers to early
treatment and recovery, and has a target waiting time from referral to
treatment of 4 weeks
• Provides highly coordinated
early care, with a central focus on reducing the duration of an untreated
eating disorder, overseen and led by a FREED champion
• Consists of a service model and
a care package of evidenced based treatments. This includes a greater emphasis
on early engagement and change, family involvement, attention to social media
use as a potential illness maintaining factor, and attention to transitions
(such as transitions out of child/adolescent services and those to university,
employment and other adult roles).
For more information visit https://freedfromed.co.uk/ or contact Sally Forbes sally.forbes@wessexahsn.net
A 5 minute
film introducing FREED including information on evidence, patient experience
and scaling up of the programme can be found here https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jKYGdPA-MJ4
Publications