The Life Scientific - Professor Janet Treasure | Our blog

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The Life Scientific - Professor Janet Treasure

One of the King’s Maudsley Partnership’s leading clinical academics appeared on BBC Radio 4’s prestigious ‘The Life Scientific  to talk about her groundbreaking career researching and treating eating disorders.

Professor Janet Treasure, scientist at the Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neuroscience ( IoPPN ) and psychiatrist at the South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust, was interviewed by The Life Scientific host Jim Al-Khalili on Tuesday 9 July.   

Professor Treasure spoke about how she came to be one of the leading researchers looking into the causes and treatments of eating disorders and her work at the IoPPN and the Maudsley   

Treasure’s career has been dedicated to helping understand the root causes of eating disorders, understanding them as rooted in biology and genetics instead of just treating them as psychological disorders. She is also passionate about removing stigma in treatment, and spoke to Al-Khalili about how working with students has inspired her.   

Treasure went on to discuss her groundbreaking study of twins with eating disorders, how the MEAD (Medical emergencies in eating disorders) guidelines for medical professionals are changing treatment in the UK, and her study into how ketamine may be an effective treatment for those with eating disorders.   

The King’s Maudsley Partnership for Children and Young People will transform our understanding and treatment of young people’s mental health through a unique collaboration between specialist clinicians from the South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust and leading academics at King’s College London.  

Our experts, such as Professor Treasure, lead the world in approaches to mental health. Together, we host the largest group of mental health scientists and clinical academics in Europe – there is no other collaboration in the world with this breadth of skills and ambition. Through this unique partnership, clinicians and researchers will collaborate even more closely to find new ways to predict, prevent and treat mental health disorders. This will benefit children locally, nationally and across the globe.  

Find out more about the King’s Maudsley Partnership - https://kingsmaudsley.org/    

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