Shaping a Better Future for Young People with Eating DisordersInfo Location Attendee Categories Contact More Info Event Information![]()
DescriptionWe invite you to a one-day conference and associated arts event, sharing key findings from the flagship EDIFY programme: Shaping a Better Future for Young People with Eating Disorders: Insights from four years of cross-disciplinary research, driving a step change in prevention and early intervention Conference: Date: Thursday 22 January 2026 | Time: 09:30 – 16:00 Arts Event: EDIFY Artists-in-Residence in Conversation with Prof Sally Marlow
Eating Disorders: Delineating illness and recovery trajectories to inform personalised prevention and early intervention in young people (EDIFY). Join us for two integrated events to explore the key findings and impact of this ambitious four-year programme of work. Alongside presentations from across the interdisciplinary EDIFY consortium we will have a host of internationally distinguished guest speakers who will reflect on how the EDIFY programme, and the eating disorder field, sit within the wider youth mental health arena. Please click on the "More info" tab for further information
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Attendee Categories4) Online - Student / Lived experience
Additional ItemsContactMore InformationCancellation & Refund Policy: Cancellation 2 months or more before the course - 100% refund
Further information: EDIFY is a four-year programme of research, led by Prof Ulrike Schmidt (KCL) and Dr Helen Sharpe (University of Edinburgh), focused on how we understand and treat eating disorders in young people. It includes six core workstreams, each approaching the topic of early intervention for eating disorders from a different perspective. The workstreams span projects in the arts and humanities right through to state-of-the-art scientific research in informatics and neuroscience. This interdisciplinary approach has helped us to build a rich picture of the different reasons why young people develop eating disorders, how these illnesses progress, and what we can do to promote lasting recovery. Join us for a day of learning, debate and celebration. International keynote and guest speakers include: Prof Matthew Broom, Professor of Psychiatry and Youth Mental Health at the University of Birmingham. Dr Jessica Schleider, Associate Professor, Director of the Lab for Scalable Mental Health and Director of Digital Services at the Centre for Behavioral Intervention Technologies at Northwestern University, Chicago. Prof Ed Watkins, Professor of Experimental and Applied Clinical Psychology at the University of Exeter. Prof Essie Viding, Professor of Developmental Psychopathology at University College London. Prof Pasco Fearon, Professor of Family Research, Director of the Centre for Family Research at the University of Cambridge. Prof Sally Marlow, Professor of Practice in Public Understanding of Mental Health Research, King’s College London EDIFY Artists in Residence Ivana Picek, also known as Pi Lubanjice, is an electro-fairy artist whose bewitching and genre-defying music is a concoction of electro-alien-fairy-cyber-hyper-pop. After two acclaimed folk albums, Picek transformed herself into an occult analog-electronic fairy, pushing the boundaries of music since her 2011 debut. She is a multi-instrumentalist and singer-songwriter who collaborates with various artists from her native Croatia and beyond, captivating a devoted following with her mystical, avant-garde sound. Zofia Chamienia is an illustrator who specialises in bold, playful designs, full of incidental shapes, wobbly lines, and self-made textures. Her work is created by mixing drawing, printmaking, and digital techniques, and she draws inspiration from ordinary, day-to-day happenings. Her illustrations always aim to feature a diverse range of people, places, communities, and cultures, celebrating the different characters and personalities she meets. Maeve Magnolia Gillespie is a textile artist and designer whose work explores the changing value of materials through processes of craft. She documents fragility, recovery, regeneration, and decay, and is interested in the human connection between objects and the fluctuating value system we attach to different materials. A full programme will be shared in due course. |