A cross-party group of MPs, including Isle of Wight West MP Richard Quigley, will join campaigners at Downing Street later today (Tuesday) to deliver a petition calling for urgent Government action to end preventable deaths from eating disorders.
The petition coincides with the launch of a major new report by the All-Party Parliamentary Group (APPG) for Eating Disorders, An Inquiry into Preventing Eating Disorder Deaths – the UK’s first national strategy to end preventable deaths from eating disorders.
Despite growing awareness, eating disorders remain among the most fatal mental health conditions. The report demands key reforms, including:
- Mandatory training for healthcare professionals to improve early diagnosis and care.
- A confidential national inquiry into eating disorder-related deaths.
- Sustainable funding for specialist services across the country.
- Data transparency and accountability for how eating disorder-related deaths are recorded and reported.
- Increased research investment to better understand the causes, risks, and long-term impacts of eating disorders.
The report is dedicated to the memory of Zara Taylor, who died by suicide in 2021 after years of inadequate care. Her story echoes the experiences of hundreds of families across the UK.
The hand-in at Downing Street will be attended by a cross-party delegation of MPs, including Sian Berry, John McDonnell, Perran Moon, Richard Quigley, Wera Hobhouse, Zara’s Mum, Debs and Campaigner Hope Virgo.
Richard Quigley, Labour MP for Isle of Wight West, has said:
“We know that no one should die from an eating disorder, the evidence is there. What we need is a change in approach, from undergraduate training to existing practitioners and support for therapies that work. Our aim of no lives lost to an eating disorder is one we can achieve if we start now.”
Hope Virgo, campaigner and Secretariat to the APPG, said:
“Without urgent and decisive action, people with eating disorders will continue to face dangerously inconsistent and inadequate care. Lives are being lost, and families are left to navigate this crisis alone.
“While there are examples of good practice across the UK, unsafe discharges remain far too common, and the system is failing to prevent avoidable deaths. These failures reveal poor accountability, fragmented commissioning, insufficient training for professionals, and a lack of tailored support for both patients and carers. This is not just a series of gaps, it’s a system in crisis.”






























































































God this pilchard really is hopeless
Stop WASTING our money on this ridiculous idea. How about tackling REAL issues that are really worrying people, not a selected few “precious” ones.
Like solving the speeding motorists problem
“20mph is plenty”
J.S
Unrealistic