Search for a command to run...
Abstract Background Minoritised ethnic individuals have comparable eating disorder rates to White populations in the United Kingdom (UK) yet face inequalities in treatment access and experiences. Understanding healthcare professional perspectives is essential for addressing these disparities. This study explores health care professional views on the access of minoritised ethnic young people to specialist eating disorder services through Levesque’s bidirectional access framework, which considers both supply and demand factors. Methods Semi-structured qualitative interviews were conducted with 12 health care professionals from diverse personal and professional backgrounds, recruited from four National Health Service (NHS) community specialist eating disorder services in the West Midlands - the UK’s second most ethnically diverse region. Participants completed sociodemographic questionnaires and online interviews via Microsoft Teams. Transcripts were analysed using reflexive thematic analysis. Results Health care professionals observed that young people of minoritised ethnic backgrounds accessed specialist eating disorder services less frequently than White British peers. Analysis revealed six interconnected themes spanning service-level and service-user-level factors. At the service level, systemic barriers included gatekeeping mechanisms (particularly GP referral requirements), service invisibility within minoritised ethnic communities, and inaccessible locations. Cultural and linguistic barriers were prominent, with communication challenges extending beyond language proficiency to fundamental differences in expressing distress. Health care professionals identified critical gaps in developing culturally sensitive services, citing limited resources, lack of workforce diversity, top-down organizational constraints, and insufficient cultural humility training. At the service-user level, education and awareness emerged as key barriers, with lower mental health literacy and limited eating disorder knowledge within minoritised ethnic communities as hindering recognition and help-seeking. Shame and stigma compounded these challenges, driven by eating disorder stereotypes and cultural beliefs about mental health that discouraged disclosure and treatment-seeking. Health care professionals noted that these barriers disproportionately affected minoritised ethnic individuals compared to their White British peers. Conclusions Findings highlight multilevel barriers to accessing eating disorder services requiring comprehensive system changes including removing gatekeeping barriers, enhancing workforce diversity and cultural competency, developing targeted educational initiatives, and challenging eating disorder stereotypes. Culturally responsive services integrating these interventions are essential to improve access and outcomes for minoritised ethnic young people.