September is National Suicide Prevention Awareness Month, a time to shine a light on one of the most pressing issues in mental health: suicide. While conversations often focus broadly on depression or trauma, it is essential to recognize the deep connection between eating disorders and suicide risk. Studies show that individuals with eating disorders experience some of the highest rates of suicide among all psychiatric illnesses. For example, suicide is one of the leading causes of death for those with anorexia nervosa, bulimia nervosa, and binge eating disorder.
This heightened risk is tied to the immense emotional pain eating disorders bring, including feelings of hopelessness, shame, isolation, and self-hatred that can overwhelm anyone. Talking openly about suicide can reduce rather than increase suicidal thoughts, making education and awareness critical tools for prevention.
This blog post provides a curated list of suicide prevention resources specifically relevant to eating disorders. Whether you are an individual struggling, a loved one seeking to support someone, or a clinician looking for tools, these resources are designed to open pathways toward hope, safety, and healing.
Understanding the Elevated Risk of Eating Disorders and Suicide
- Suicide rates in anorexia, bulimia, and other eating disorders.
- Contributing factors: depression, PTSD, impulsivity, trauma.
- Why this intersection demands awareness.
Eating disorders are among the deadliest mental health conditions, with suicide being the second leading cause of death. Â
Research indicates that individuals with anorexia nervosa are up to 18 times more likely to die by suicide than the general population. Those with bulimia nervosa and binge eating disorder also face elevated suicide rates compared to peers without eating disorders. LGBTQ youth with a diagnosed eating disorder are nearly four times more likely to have attempted suicide in the past year compared to peers who have never had, or only suspected they had, an eating disorder.
Several factors contribute to this intersection. Many clients live with co-occurring depression, PTSD, anxiety, or trauma histories that compound their risk. Traits such as perfectionism, impulsivity, and intense emotional pain also increase vulnerability. People experiencing eating disorders often feel overwhelming guilt, shame, and hopelessness, which can create a dangerous cycle of self-criticism and despair.
The urgency becomes even clearer when looking at global data: suicide is the #1 cause of death among adolescent girls, and the #2 cause of death for individuals aged 10–34. Within eating disorder populations, risk factors such as weight suppression, social isolation, and medical complications add further strain.
Because eating disorders and suicide share such a dangerous overlap, raising awareness is not optional - it’s lifesaving. Families, clinicians, and communities must be equipped to recognize warning signs, understand contributing factors, and offer timely interventions that combine eating disorder care with suicide prevention strategies.
Why Support for Eating Disorders & Mental Health Is Crucial
Stigma and shame remain major barriers for those living with eating disorders and suicidal thoughts. Many feel silenced by fear of being judged or dismissed, making it less likely they will reach out for help. Without compassionate intervention, isolation can reinforce the dangerous belief that no one cares.
Early support changes outcomes. Asking directly about suicidal thoughts does not increase the risk. In fact, research shows it can reduce suicidal ideation by breaking through secrecy and showing that someone is willing to listen. Communities, caregivers, and professionals who create safe, nonjudgmental spaces play a crucial role in reducing risk and encouraging treatment engagement.
Eating disorder recovery requires not only nutritional rehabilitation but also attention to the emotional struggles that accompany the illness. By combining evidence-based therapies with suicide prevention strategies, treatment can address the whole person—body, mind, and spirit. Supporting those at risk is about more than safety; it is about affirming their worth and helping them envision a future beyond the eating disorder.
Curated Directory of Resources for Eating Disorders & Suicide Risk
Crisis Hotlines & Immediate Help
- 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline (U.S.): Call or text 988 for 24/7 confidential support from trained crisis counselors.
- Crisis Text Line: Text HELLO to 741741 to connect with a crisis counselor.
Warning signs of acute suicide risk include talking about wanting to die, seeking access to lethal means, or showing dramatic mood changes. If these behaviors appear, immediate help is necessary. Parents, friends, and caregivers should never wait to act - call 911 if someone is in imminent danger.
Eating Disorder–Specific Support
- Monte Nido: Offers inpatient, residential, PHP, IOP, and virtual treatment, with suicide prevention integrated into care.
Eating disorder–specific hotlines and organizations provide targeted support for those whose struggles with food and body are closely tied to suicidal thoughts.
Broader Mental Health & Suicide Prevention Organizations
- American Foundation for Suicide Prevention (AFSP): Offers research, advocacy, and support groups.
- The Trevor Project: Crisis services for LGBTQ+ youth, who face elevated risk for both eating disorders and suicide.
These organizations provide a wider net of mental health resources that complement eating disorder–specific supports.
Safety Planning & Emergency Tools
If an individual is struggling with suicidal thinking, a mental health professional can help develop a Safety Plan which can be designed to give individuals a step-by-step approach for managing suicidal thoughts when they arise. Â These plans can offer a crucial bridge between a crisis and ongoing treatment.
Professional & Educational Resources
Mental health professionals are trained to provide a suicide risk assessment and when needed to help someone into the level of care that can best assist them. Â Additionally, there are numerous continuing education programs designed to equip professionals with the latest knowledge and to ensure that suicide prevention is embedded in treatment programs, schools, and healthcare systems.
How to Use These Resources
- For individuals: keeping numbers accessible, joining groups, therapy.
- For loved ones: listening, validating, helping with safety plans.
For clinicians/educators: screening, integrating safety planning, awareness in programs.
Suicide prevention resources are most effective when they are accessible and actively used. Individuals living with eating disorders can benefit from keeping hotline numbers saved in their phone, downloading safety planning apps, and exploring peer support communities. Therapy and structured treatment programs remain essential in reducing long-term risk.
For loved ones, the role is to listen without judgment, validate feelings, and encourage the use of crisis services when needed. Parents and caregivers can help teens create safety plans, remind them of available resources, and normalize asking for help. Even if conversations feel unproductive, research shows that those at risk are often listening closely.
For clinicians and educators, resources should be integrated into daily practice. Screening for suicide risk, creating safety plans, and connecting students or clients with crisis services are essential steps. Educational institutions and treatment centers alike can reduce stigma by openly discussing suicide prevention and ensuring that staff are trained in compassionate intervention.
The key is to make these tools part of everyday life—visible, accessible, and actively used, so that when risk arises, help feels within reach.
Taking Action: Support for Suicide and Eating Disorders
Suicide prevention starts with awareness and action. Saving helpline numbers, sharing them with others, and talking openly about eating disorders and suicide can create life-saving connections. Each conversation helps break stigma and reminds those struggling that they are not alone.
Monte Nido offers evidence-based, compassionate treatment designed to address both eating disorders and the co-occurring risks that come with them. If you or someone you know is in need, reach out today. Every step toward connection is a step away from isolation, and toward recovery.
Hope and Healing Beyond Suicide and Eating Disorders
Eating disorders carry a high risk of suicide, but risk does not define destiny. With timely support, compassionate treatment, and strong community connections, healing is possible. Talking openly about suicide does not create risk - it creates relief, reminding individuals that their pain can be shared and lightened.
No one has to face this alone. Help is always available, and recovery is within reach. By raising awareness this Suicide Prevention Month and beyond, we can help more people move from despair to hope—and toward lives full of meaning and possibility.