Date published: 6 June 2022
Funding has been secured to extend the Liverpool FREED service across Sefton, to help even more young people and adults who are battling with eating disorders.
The ‘First Episode Rapid Early Intervention for Eating Disorders’ (FREED) service will transform care for those with eating disorders, or emerging eating disorders. It will enable them to be seen earlier and through a stepped care approach, which aims to provide the most efficient and effective intervention first. It will also allow transition to a more specialist intervention, should it be required.
Currently run by Mersey Care NHS Foundation Trust across Liverpool, the service will extend into Sefton from 6 June 2022 and is open to 16 to 25-year-olds in the area who have had an eating disorder for three years or less.
“Studies suggest the first three years of illness are crucial in treating eating disorders,” said Dr Charlotte Jewell, Mersey Care's Clinical Psychologist and Sefton FREED Champion.
“Eating disorders tend to persist over time and the longer a young person is unwell, the more likely it is they experience significant issues so we’re really excited to have the opportunity to extend the FREED service to Sefton. We’re confident that early intervention will support good outcomes for young adults with eating disorders across Sefton, like it has in Liverpool.”
Eating disorders historically have the highest mortality rate of any mental health disorder. One in seven women are likely to experience it over the course of their lifetime and peak onset is during adolescence and young adulthood. Nationally,referrals increased following the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic and UK lockdowns.
FREED is a flexible, evidence-based treatment approach. Its focus on early intervention makes it more effective at reversing the changes to the brain, body and behaviour caused by eating disorders.
Sefton FREED will also become part the national FREED network, which joins them up with other specialist eating disorder services using the model across the country.
Any patients wishing to use it can be referred via their GP through the main Eating Disorder Service, where the new service will be based.