The Nexus Teen Academy editorial and clinical team is dedicated to providing informative and accurate content to help families who are struggling with adolescent behavioral health problems. The editorial team works directly with the clinical team to ensure information is accurate and up-to-date.
To do this, our team uses the following editorial guidelines:
We generally only cite government and peer-reviewed studies
Scientific claims and data are backed by qualified sources
Content is updated to ensure we are citing the most up-to-date data and information
Clinically reviewed by Executive Director Hannah Carr-Unquera, LPC
Executive Director Hannah Carr-Unquera, LPC
Hannah graduated from Arizona State University with her Bachelor’s in Psychology and Master’s in Counseling and is a Licensed Professional Counselor in Arizona. She began her work as a therapist 12 years ago in South Phoenix with an intensive outpatient program for teens and their families. She joined Nexus in the residential program as the clinical director, eventually being promoted to the executive director, creating and building the clinical program structure and a strong culture focused on redirecting the trajectory of young lives.
The Nexus Teen Academy Editorial Staff is composed of writers, editors, and clinical reviewers with many years of experience writing about mental health and behavioral health treatment. Our team utilizes peer-reviewed, clinical studies from sources like SAMHSA to ensure we provide the most accurate and current information.
The relationship between depression and eating disorders is a reinforcing cycle. For several teenagers, disordered eating patterns serve as a way of managing the intense, numbing weight ofteen depression. At the same time, their physiological impact can trigger or worsen depressive symptoms. It is common to miss the early signs of both disorders, as teens are masters of concealment.
Let’s take a look at the co-occurrence of teen depression andeating disorders. We will discuss the red flags most parents overlook and how to help your teenager recover. If you notice these red flags or are seeking immediate professional help, contact our team atNexus Teen Academytoday.
Why Depression and Eating Disorders Co-Occur in Teens
The brain looks for ways it can change a teenager’s emotional state when they feel low or empty. A successful fast or a binge eating episode can offer a high or temporary comfort that may momentarily shift depressive feelings. Below is how teen depression and eating disorders co-occur in teenagers.
Food and Control as Coping
Identity uncertainty is common during adolescence. A teenager may feel unable to control their environment in the face of trauma, social stress, or perfectionism.
Food intake may be the only thing they can regulate.
Calories and weight may provide a false sense of security when emotions feel unpredictable.
Shame, Self-Criticism, and Emotional Numbing
An eating disorder may serve as a way of reducing the frequency of a teenager’s pain.
The self-criticism that depressed teenagers experience can be the same one that pushes them to disordered eating.
Purging or binge eating can trigger a short neurochemical release that blurs intense sadness orteen anxiety. However, the feeling is usually followed by a crushing wave of guilt.
The Spiral: Mood- Eating Behaviors- Worse Mood
The pattern below is often referred to as the “reinforcing cycle.”
A teenager feels hopeless.
They use food to cope.
Chemical imbalances or malnutrition from purging trigger brain fog and fatigue.
The starving brain becomes unable to produce enough serotonin. The teenager’s depression becomes biologically worse and harder to fight.
Eating Disorders and Disordered Eating Patterns Teens May Experience
You can help your teenager. However, you first need to understand the different ways their struggles may manifest. Below are some of the common eating disorders or disordered eating patterns that teenagers may experience.
Restriction and “Clean Eating” That Becomes Rigid
What begins as a healthy diet may quickly turn into restrictive dieting orteen Anorexia Nervosa. Your teenager may:
Create rigid rules about what is allowed.
Develop sudden, intense anxiety about specific food groups like fats or carbs.
Escalate control leading to dangerous weight loss.
Binge Eating and Loss of Control
Binge Eating Disorder (BED) is quite common. However, it can be difficult to identify, as it is usually shrouded in secrecy. Your teenager may:
Eat large amounts of food in response to sadness or stress.
Experience a guilt cycle. The binge usually offers momentary comfort. However, the resulting shame triggers further depression.
Become increasingly secretive. You may find hidden wrappers or notice food missing from the pantry.
Purging and Compensatory Behaviors
Your son or daughter may obsessively try to undo the calories consumed. Watch out for:
Frequent trips to the bathroom after meals.
Use of laxatives or diuretics
Working out for hours to burn calories, including when injured or tired.
ARFID and Sensory/ Anxiety-Driven Avoidance
One of the most misunderstood eating disorders is the Avoidant/Restrictive Food Intake Disorder (ARFID).
It is usually driven by sensory sensitivities like textures or smells.
Its extreme food limitation usually leads to the same malnutrition-induced depression witnessed in other disorders.
Warning Signs Parents Should Watch Out For (Mood+Eating)
You should monitor your teenager closely. Watch out for a cluster of symptoms across different areas of their life. Below are common warning signs.
Emotional and Behavioral Red Flags
Isolation, heightened irritability, and rigidity should concern you. Watch out if your teenager:
Snaps over small things, especially when food is involved.
Spends most of their time in their room
Avoids family outings
Struggles to accommodate plans or meals
Food, Body, and Exercise Clues
The behaviors below can signal an eating disorder.
Skipping family dinner consistently.
Always wearing heavy or baggy clothing to hide weight loss.
Suspicious bathroom patterns
Physical and Medical Clues
Physical and medical indicators include the following.
Always complaining of being cold even in warm rooms.
Physical changes such as thinning hair or fainting spells.
Digestive issues like chronic stomach pain or feeling full after a few bites.
School and Social Clues
Your teenager may be struggling with teen depression and an eating disorder if they:
Quit sports they once loved
Avoid food-related social hangouts
Suddenly begin failing classes
Start obsessing over grades as their only source of self-worth
Root Causes and Risk Factors Parents Overlook
Your teenager’s condition is not just about food. Several commonly overlooked issues contribute to mental health issues. Below are a few potential causes and risk factors.
Trauma, Bullying, and Social Media Pressure
A teenager who is constantly exposed to curated or idealized bodies on Instagram or TikTok can fall victim to the relentless comparison culture. Weight-based teasing can also trigger the onset of an eating disorder.
High Achievement, Perfectionism, and Identity Stress
Perfectionism poses a higher risk of mental health issues for teenagers. Your son or daughter may believe they are a failure if they cannot be the best at everything. They may turn to controlling their bodies to prove their success or discipline.
Family Dynamics Without Parent-Blame
The home environment may be toxic even if your parenting style is okay.
A vulnerable teenager can accidentally be misled by constant conversations about “good vs. bad” foods or the desire to lose weight.
A teenager from a family that does not talk about hard emotions may turn to disordered eating patterns to express what they cannot say out loud.
Neurodiversity and Sensory Issues
Eating disorders and neurodivergence or sensory issues like Autism and teen ADHD, share a strong link.
Teens with ADHD may forget to eat. This may trigger a starve-binge cycle.
Certain food textures can be physically painful for neurodivergent teens. They may restrict themselves as a result.
How Professionals Diagnose and Assess Co-Occurring Depression + Eating Disorders
Teens with possible co-occurring disorders should get a comprehensive assessment. Your son or daughter needs more than a 15-minute check-up. Treatment professionals should conduct a deep dive into their ecosystem.
What a Quality Assessment Includes
A professional team consisting of a dietitian, therapist, and doctor usually:
Psychologically screen for depression, anxiety, or PTSD.
Map the teenager’s behavior to understand the frequency of their binging, restriction, or purging.
Check if a teenager is using substances to numb how they feel.
Medical Workup and Monitoring
Eating disorders present physical danger. Treatment professionals often check vitals, like the teen’s heart rate, when they are sitting vs. when they stand. They also conduct bloodwork to check electrolyte levels and, at times, an EKG to ensure heart health.
Why Treating Both is Essential
The eating disorder continues to starve a teenager’s brain if you only treat their depression. If you treat the eating disorder but ignore the depression, the latter can eventually drive the teenager back to disordered eating. Integrated care is necessary for long-term recovery.
Parent Playbook: What to Do at Home
Your teenager should feel safe at home. You should make it a safe harbor, not a battlefield. Here is what to do.
How to Talk About Food and Mood Safely
You should use “I” statements more to avoid blame or judgment. You can say, “I have noticed you have been spending more time in your room than usual. Are you okay?” Avoid talking about your teenager’s weight, even if you think it is a compliment.
Mealtime Support Without Power Struggles
You should keep your own emotions in check at the table. Your teenager will likely be anxious if you show signs of anxiety. Avoid labels like junk or guilty pleasures. Treat food simply as fuel and pleasure.
Reduce Triggers in the Home
Begin by removing the weighing scale. Visit a physician if your teenager must track their weight. Boundaries are also important. You should limit body checking and encourage social media breaks.
Support Skills That Reduce Depression
Focus on spending time with your teenager on non-food-related activities. You can play a game, watch a movie, or go for a drive. You should also help your son or daughter maintain a consistent sleep schedule. Remember, sleep deprivation can trigger depressive moods.
The Nexus Teen Academy Approach to Depression and Eating Struggles
We believe that teens are more than their diagnosis at Nexus Teen Academy. Although co-occurring eating disorders and depression may weigh heavily on them, the right integrated care can treat them.
Nexus Teen Academy offers both residential treatment at our gender-specific homes and outpatient support through our sister organization, NexStep Teen Academy.Contact usto learn more about our programming and how we can help your son or daughter who may be struggling with their behavioral health.
Medications can be helpful. However, many depressants are less effective if the brain is in starvation mode. You may need to combine natural stability with medication.
Do not make a scene at the table. You can address their refusal later when everything is calm. You should seek professional help if it becomes a pattern.
Yes. Boys may begin obsessing about muscle mass or leanness. The pressure to perform or the “ideal” sports-related body type may get to male teen athletes.
You should focus on feelings and behaviors rather than weight. You can tell them that you have noticed they are stressed lately or are spending lots of time exercising. Summarize by expressing your concern.
Executive Director Hannah Carr-Unquera, LPC and Nexus Teen Academy
Depression & Eating Disorders in Teens
FACT CHECKED
The Nexus Teen Academy editorial and clinical team is dedicated to providing informative and accurate content to help families who are struggling with adolescent behavioral health problems. The editorial team works directly with the clinical team to ensure information is accurate and up-to-date.
To do this, our team uses the following editorial guidelines:
Clinically reviewed by Executive Director Hannah Carr-Unquera, LPC
Executive Director Hannah Carr-Unquera, LPC
Hannah graduated from Arizona State University with her Bachelor’s in Psychology and Master’s in Counseling and is a Licensed Professional Counselor in Arizona. She began her work as a therapist 12 years ago in South Phoenix with an intensive outpatient program for teens and their families. She joined Nexus in the residential program as the clinical director, eventually being promoted to the executive director, creating and building the clinical program structure and a strong culture focused on redirecting the trajectory of young lives.
Published By Nexus Teen Academy
Nexus Teen Academy
The Nexus Teen Academy Editorial Staff is composed of writers, editors, and clinical reviewers with many years of experience writing about mental health and behavioral health treatment. Our team utilizes peer-reviewed, clinical studies from sources like SAMHSA to ensure we provide the most accurate and current information.
Published On June 29, 2026
Table of Contents
The relationship between depression and eating disorders is a reinforcing cycle. For several teenagers, disordered eating patterns serve as a way of managing the intense, numbing weight of teen depression. At the same time, their physiological impact can trigger or worsen depressive symptoms. It is common to miss the early signs of both disorders, as teens are masters of concealment.
Let’s take a look at the co-occurrence of teen depression and eating disorders. We will discuss the red flags most parents overlook and how to help your teenager recover. If you notice these red flags or are seeking immediate professional help, contact our team at Nexus Teen Academy today.
Why Depression and Eating Disorders Co-Occur in Teens
The brain looks for ways it can change a teenager’s emotional state when they feel low or empty. A successful fast or a binge eating episode can offer a high or temporary comfort that may momentarily shift depressive feelings. Below is how teen depression and eating disorders co-occur in teenagers.
Food and Control as Coping
Identity uncertainty is common during adolescence. A teenager may feel unable to control their environment in the face of trauma, social stress, or perfectionism.
Shame, Self-Criticism, and Emotional Numbing
An eating disorder may serve as a way of reducing the frequency of a teenager’s pain.
The Spiral: Mood- Eating Behaviors- Worse Mood
The pattern below is often referred to as the “reinforcing cycle.”
Eating Disorders and Disordered Eating Patterns Teens May Experience
You can help your teenager. However, you first need to understand the different ways their struggles may manifest. Below are some of the common eating disorders or disordered eating patterns that teenagers may experience.
Restriction and “Clean Eating” That Becomes Rigid
What begins as a healthy diet may quickly turn into restrictive dieting or teen Anorexia Nervosa. Your teenager may:
Binge Eating and Loss of Control
Binge Eating Disorder (BED) is quite common. However, it can be difficult to identify, as it is usually shrouded in secrecy. Your teenager may:
Purging and Compensatory Behaviors
Your son or daughter may obsessively try to undo the calories consumed. Watch out for:
ARFID and Sensory/ Anxiety-Driven Avoidance
One of the most misunderstood eating disorders is the Avoidant/Restrictive Food Intake Disorder (ARFID).
Warning Signs Parents Should Watch Out For (Mood+Eating)
You should monitor your teenager closely. Watch out for a cluster of symptoms across different areas of their life. Below are common warning signs.
Emotional and Behavioral Red Flags
Isolation, heightened irritability, and rigidity should concern you. Watch out if your teenager:
Food, Body, and Exercise Clues
The behaviors below can signal an eating disorder.
Physical and Medical Clues
Physical and medical indicators include the following.
School and Social Clues
Your teenager may be struggling with teen depression and an eating disorder if they:
Root Causes and Risk Factors Parents Overlook
Your teenager’s condition is not just about food. Several commonly overlooked issues contribute to mental health issues. Below are a few potential causes and risk factors.
Trauma, Bullying, and Social Media Pressure
A teenager who is constantly exposed to curated or idealized bodies on Instagram or TikTok can fall victim to the relentless comparison culture. Weight-based teasing can also trigger the onset of an eating disorder.
High Achievement, Perfectionism, and Identity Stress
Perfectionism poses a higher risk of mental health issues for teenagers. Your son or daughter may believe they are a failure if they cannot be the best at everything. They may turn to controlling their bodies to prove their success or discipline.
Family Dynamics Without Parent-Blame
The home environment may be toxic even if your parenting style is okay.
Neurodiversity and Sensory Issues
Eating disorders and neurodivergence or sensory issues like Autism and teen ADHD, share a strong link.
How Professionals Diagnose and Assess Co-Occurring Depression + Eating Disorders
Teens with possible co-occurring disorders should get a comprehensive assessment. Your son or daughter needs more than a 15-minute check-up. Treatment professionals should conduct a deep dive into their ecosystem.
What a Quality Assessment Includes
A professional team consisting of a dietitian, therapist, and doctor usually:
Medical Workup and Monitoring
Eating disorders present physical danger. Treatment professionals often check vitals, like the teen’s heart rate, when they are sitting vs. when they stand. They also conduct bloodwork to check electrolyte levels and, at times, an EKG to ensure heart health.
Why Treating Both is Essential
The eating disorder continues to starve a teenager’s brain if you only treat their depression. If you treat the eating disorder but ignore the depression, the latter can eventually drive the teenager back to disordered eating. Integrated care is necessary for long-term recovery.
Parent Playbook: What to Do at Home
Your teenager should feel safe at home. You should make it a safe harbor, not a battlefield. Here is what to do.
How to Talk About Food and Mood Safely
You should use “I” statements more to avoid blame or judgment. You can say, “I have noticed you have been spending more time in your room than usual. Are you okay?” Avoid talking about your teenager’s weight, even if you think it is a compliment.
Mealtime Support Without Power Struggles
You should keep your own emotions in check at the table. Your teenager will likely be anxious if you show signs of anxiety. Avoid labels like junk or guilty pleasures. Treat food simply as fuel and pleasure.
Reduce Triggers in the Home
Begin by removing the weighing scale. Visit a physician if your teenager must track their weight. Boundaries are also important. You should limit body checking and encourage social media breaks.
Support Skills That Reduce Depression
Focus on spending time with your teenager on non-food-related activities. You can play a game, watch a movie, or go for a drive. You should also help your son or daughter maintain a consistent sleep schedule. Remember, sleep deprivation can trigger depressive moods.
The Nexus Teen Academy Approach to Depression and Eating Struggles
We believe that teens are more than their diagnosis at Nexus Teen Academy. Although co-occurring eating disorders and depression may weigh heavily on them, the right integrated care can treat them.
Nexus Teen Academy offers both residential treatment at our gender-specific homes and outpatient support through our sister organization, NexStep Teen Academy. Contact us to learn more about our programming and how we can help your son or daughter who may be struggling with their behavioral health.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
Yes. A good number of people with eating disorders do not look frail. Serious complications can happen at any weight.
Medications can be helpful. However, many depressants are less effective if the brain is in starvation mode. You may need to combine natural stability with medication.
Do not make a scene at the table. You can address their refusal later when everything is calm. You should seek professional help if it becomes a pattern.
Yes. Boys may begin obsessing about muscle mass or leanness. The pressure to perform or the “ideal” sports-related body type may get to male teen athletes.
You should focus on feelings and behaviors rather than weight. You can tell them that you have noticed they are stressed lately or are spending lots of time exercising. Summarize by expressing your concern.