DOZENS of children received urgent treatment for eating disorders at Dorset Healthcare last year, new figures show.

NHS England figures show 36 children were urgently treated for eating disorders at Dorset Healthcare University NHS Foundation Trust in the year to June, up from 29 over the same period two years earlier.

NICE guidance states 95 per cent of urgent referrals should be treated within one week.

But at the trust, just 16 cases (44.4 per cent) met this threshold.

In the 12 months to June 2020, 24 of the 29 urgent referrals (82.8 per cent) were seen within one week.

Across the country, the proportion of children with an urgent referral seen within one week fell from 88 per cent in the year to June 2020, to 68 per cent last year.

Across the same period, the number of children waiting for urgent treatment across England has increased fourfold – from 56 to 230.

Tom Quinn, director of external affairs at Beat, said the rise in waiting times and lists is "very concerning", with many children experiencing heightened anxiety during the pandemic, and some reaching out for help with eating disorders for the first time.

The number of children waiting for eating disorder treatment following routine referrals in England has also rocketed during the pandemic – 1,500 children were waiting for treatment at the end of June, more than triple the 441 two years before.

NICE Guidance says 95 per cent of routine cases should be treated within four weeks of a referral.

But at Dorset Healthcare, 27 of 77 children with routine referrals were seen within four weeks.

The Department for Health and Social Care said it is "determined" to provide mental health care to those with eating disorders and that it will invest in services to treat an additional 345,000 children and young people by 2024.

NHS England said the pandemic has had an impact on the nation's mental health but that an additional £2.3 billion will be invested in services to aid treatment.