# Why Young People With Eating Disorder Symptoms Do Not Seek Help—Exploring Barriers to Help‐Seeking

**Authors:** Johanna Stadler, Markus Moessner, Katja Becker, Alisa Hiery, Silke Diestelkamp, Heike Eschenbeck, Vera Gillé, Michael Kaess, Julian Koenig, Christine Rummel‐Kluge, Elisabeth Kohls, Rainer Thomasius, Stephanie Bauer, Michael Kaess, Michael Kaess, Stephanie Bauer, Rainer Thomasius, Christine Rummel‐Kluge, Heike Eschenbeck, Hans‐Joachim Salize, Katja Becker, Sabrina Bonnet, Johannes Feldhege, Christina Gallinat, Stella Hammon, Julian Koenig, Sophia Lustig, Markus Moessner, Fikret Özer, Regina Richter, Franz Resch, Johanna Stadler, Steffen Luntz, Silke Diestelkamp, Anna‐Lena Schulz, Sabrina Baldofski, Sarah‐Lena Klemm, Elisabeth Kohls, Sophia Müller, Lina‐Jolien Peter, Mandy Rogalla, Vera Gillé, Johanna Jade, Laya Lehner, Elke Voss, Alisa Hiery, Jennifer Krämer

PMC · DOI: 10.1002/eat.24515 · The International Journal of Eating Disorders · 2025-08-12

## TL;DR

This study explores why young people with eating disorder symptoms often don't seek help, finding that mental health issues like depression and emotional problems are key factors in prompting help-seeking behavior.

## Contribution

The study uses a decision tree approach to identify specific barriers to help-seeking among adolescents and young adults with eating disorder symptoms.

## Key findings

- 77.3% of individuals with eating disorder symptoms did not seek formal mental health help.
- Emotional problems, suicidality, and depressive symptoms are strongly associated with help-seeking behavior.
- Public health efforts should focus on increasing awareness and knowledge of eating disorders to improve help-seeking rates.

## Abstract

Rates of help‐seeking and treatment uptake are low in eating disorders. Delayed initiation of treatment has a negative impact on prognosis and treatment outcome and leads to a higher burden on the healthcare system. The aim of this study was to explore factors associated with help‐seeking and their interactions in a large sample of adolescents and young adults with current symptoms of an eating disorder.

Based on the Classification and Regression Trees (CART) algorithm, the data collected within the German school‐based project ProHEAD (N = 9796; age: 12–25 years) were used to estimate a decision tree to classify students into help‐seekers and non‐help‐seekers for a mental health issue.

Of those screened, 13% reported substantial current eating disorder symptoms (N = 1273). Out of those, 77.3% reported that they did not seek formal help (i.e., from a mental health professional). The absence of suicidal ideation and emotional problems, as well as a low level of education and openness to mental health issues, was characteristic of those who did not seek help for a mental health problem. Emotional problems, suicidality, and depressive symptoms were identified as the most important factors associated with general help‐seeking.

In line with previous research, our findings indicate that individuals with eating disorder symptoms are more likely to seek help when other mental health issues are present. Public health efforts should aim to promote awareness and increase knowledge of eating disorders.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Eating Disorder (MESH:D001068), mental health (OMIM:603663), depressive symptoms (MESH:D003866)

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

63 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12605834/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12605834