Recovery is possible. Our data shows it.
Thousands of patients improved in our care. Learn from key insights below.
Proven clinical assessments show what’s working
Patients come to us concerned about weight, shape, eating, and restriction.
We track these symptoms with a global score
Weight Concern
How often someone thinks about their weight and how much those thoughts affect daily life.
Shape Concern
Distress or unease related to body shape or appearance.
Restraint
How strongly someone feels the need to limit or control their eating.
Eating Concern
Worries, guilt, or distress related to eating habits and attitudes toward food.
Global Score
A combined measure that reflects overall eating disorder symptom severity across the other areas.
Children and adolescents had meaningful reductions in eating disorder symptoms

57%
reported significant eating disorder symptoms at admission
26%
reported significant eating disorder symptoms at discharge
Parents trusted the care their child received

89%
found their experience at ERC helpful
88%
felt their care team met their expectations
“We knew that we could go to sleep and rest well at night knowing she was in such great hands.”
Allegra
Significant reductions in eating disorder symptoms among adults
70%
reported significant eating disorder symptoms at admission
30%
reported significant eating disorder symptoms at discharge

Patients reported positive changes during their experience

75%
found their experience at ERC helpful
75%
felt their care team met their expectations
Recovery often means progress across multiple areas, not just one diagnosis
Most patients enter treatment with at least one co-occurring mental health concern.
Children and adolescents reported a co-occurring condition
83%
Anxiety
76%
Depression
Most commonly reported conditions
“I could not have possibly had a better experience with ERC… Very quickly, I realized that was the safest space I had ever been in before.”
Kate
Review the data in more detail
Read the full report for details on how results are measured and how patients move through care.