Eating Disorder Treatment in London
Eating disorders — anorexia nervosa, bulimia nervosa, binge eating disorder, ARFID, and the range of less formally categorised difficult relationships with food and the body — are among the most complex presentations in clinical practice. They sit at the intersection of psychology and physiology, of early development and present circumstance, of private suffering and public performance. Effective treatment requires a clinician who can work across all of these dimensions, not just the most visible ones.
Philippe Jacquet & Associates offers specialist eating disorder treatment in London at Harley Street W1, Central London, and Bermondsey SE1. Philippe Jacquet holds Europe’s only doctoral research specifically on male eating disorders — a specialism that reflects both the depth of his engagement with this population and the extent to which eating disorders in men remain underserved by mainstream provision.
Types of eating disorder treated
This practice works with all eating disorder presentations, including anorexia nervosa — both restrictive and atypical; bulimia nervosa; binge eating disorder; ARFID (avoidant restrictive food intake disorder); orthorexia — the preoccupation with dietary purity that is particularly common in men; and dysmorphic muscle preoccupation, also more prevalent in male presentations. Many people who seek eating disorder treatment in London are not certain whether their experience qualifies — whether it is serious enough, or whether it fits a recognisable pattern. That uncertainty is itself part of what brings people to treatment, and it is not a barrier to starting.
Eating disorders in men
Men represent approximately a quarter of people with eating disorders, but are significantly underrepresented in treatment. The reasons are well-documented: the cultural framing of eating disorders as a female problem, the way male presentations differ from the clinical pictures that dominate public awareness, and the shortage of clinicians with genuine expertise in this area. Philippe Jacquet is the only clinician in Europe to have conducted doctoral-level research specifically on male eating disorders. That specialism is not incidental — it is the result of sustained clinical and academic engagement with a population that has been poorly served.
The approach to treatment
Eating disorder treatment at this practice is depth-oriented and integrative — drawing on Jungian analysis, psychodynamic frameworks, and a clinical understanding of the body as a site of meaning, not just behaviour. The work does not focus primarily on food, weight or eating behaviours. It focuses on what those behaviours are doing: what they are managing, protecting against, or expressing. Understanding that is what makes change possible at depth, rather than at the level of symptom management alone.
For presentations where trauma is implicated — which is frequently the case — EMDR is available. Philippe Jacquet is an EMDR practitioner with over 20 years of experience and uses it within the therapeutic relationship as part of a broader treatment approach rather than as a standalone protocol.
What to expect
Treatment begins with an initial consultation — a private conversation about what has brought you here, your history, and what you are looking for. There is no obligation to continue beyond it. The first session is not an assessment in a clinical or bureaucratic sense. It is a conversation between two people, in which you can speak as much or as little as feels right, and in which nothing is assumed from your presence.
Sessions are available in person at Harley Street W1, Central London, and Bermondsey SE1. Online sessions via secure video link offer the same depth of clinical work and are preferred by some clients for reasons of privacy or convenience. No GP referral or formal diagnosis is required to begin.
Confidentiality
All sessions are conducted under strict and absolute confidentiality. Nothing shared in sessions is disclosed to any third party — GP, insurer, employer or family member — without explicit written consent. The only exceptions are narrow legal obligations which are explained clearly at the outset and which almost never arise in ordinary therapeutic practice.
