tastellfe welcome to the tastelife annual report for 2020-2021 from CEO Di Archer Mrs Diana Archer, co-founder of tastelifeuk, recognised in 2019 by the Prime Minister's 'Points of Light, Award, for providi ng eating disorder sufferers and thei r family and friends with vital support on Iheir path to recovery.
Launching into the COVID-19 sea tastelifeuk was created as a beacon of hope to those struggling with eating disorders- whether personally or supporting others. This year, while we have continued to keep that beacon alight, we have also, like everyone else, had to respond to the extraordinary worldwide crisis of COVID-19. Before Covid, our focus was on spreading that light as far as we could. Because of Covid, we have kitted out and launched a new lifeboat to offer rescue to those tossed about in the tumultuous seas of coping with an eating disorder in the middle of a pandemic. Unprecedented, indeed. The tastelife lifeboat had to be created very quickly, as the UK was thrown into sudden lockdown and accompanying realisation that this virus was not going to let up any time soon. Some of our tastelife courses, delivering unique and targeted understanding and help to groups around the country, bravely switched to online meeting in the middle of their delivery. As we entered truly uncharted waters both as people and 3 charity, our new lifeboat proved equal to the storm. We are immensely proud of our core team, voluntary leaders financial supporters and our trustees, as they learned to sail in utterly new ways, with new equipment and new ropes. tastellfe
Sailing into the wind The pandemic has highlighted as never before the effects of poor mental health, and we are bizarrely grateful for how this has hit the headlines. Even the strongest among us have found the last year tricky,. how much more those whose mental health is compromised, especially those with eating disorders (The Guardian 11.2.211. Not surprisingly, the number of people whose eating issues have worsened, or even begun, during 2020 has escalated. For so many people of all ages in the UK, Covid-19 has heightened the problems they had already. For those with eating disorders, grappling with an unhealthy and often dangerous relationship with food, it has increased their vulnerability. And because eating disorder behaviour often begins as a way of coping with difficulties in life, sufferers are more, rather than less, likelyto turn to their unhelpful and often dangerous food patterns. While our marvellous, hugely challenged and massively overstretched NHS is keeping the country afloat in many ways, the need for tastelife services has never been greater. The good news is that, with our new lifeboat, we can now reach more people than ever before. We have responded to the Covid storm by choosing to take all our services online. Rather than participants driving an hour or so to get to our weekly courses, now we can take our lifeboat to them and meet them in their living rooms. We have been encouraged to discover that the tastelife course works just as well online and indeed has some advantages. Perhaps it is less scary to relate through a screen, where you have plenty of control, than in per50n, where you might be acutely self-conscious. tastellfe
How do you build a lifeboat? This deeply demanding year of Covid has included: Creating a suite of backup resources for our voluntary tastelife leaders to take their courses online - it's all there ready to roll. including on extra say-hello session to compensate for lack of meeting in person. Free extra training for our voluntary tastelife course leaders to leam how to operote online delivery platforms, ond build their confidence to do $0. We olso offer the loan of laptops for any leader who needs it to facilitate easy online facilitation of the tostelife course. Previews online - open lunchtime sessions to pop in ond find out more about what training to run the tastelife course involves. Or more about the Youth Track. Toking on board a new database system, with the ability to automate all our sign-up processes and odministration - again, increasing access to our support. Continuing development of this system to support oll our work ocross the boot... Expanding our staff team to include a post dedicated to social media presence, in order to offer sensitive. truthful and hopeful information about eating disorders. This commitment to contemp)rary communication is generating increasing interest ond engagement. Our posts ore designed to speak directly to those suffering with food issues, ond to those interested in these problems. With videos of reol-life stories of recovery, plus straight-tolking titbits of information. we are combatting the lies ond pressure around body imoge and food, which is so often found in the marketplace thot is sociol medio. It is eosy to find ideos for keeping eoting disorders going - we are holding out a lifebelt to those who want to escape their power. tastelKfe
want to keep leading these courses. So many more people to help Toking our 2-doy tastelife training events online, which mode them eosy for 39 people this year to be equipped to run the tastelife communty course. This was more thon we hoped for ond, like the tostelife course itself, hos opened up accessibility for more volunteers to train with us. This training is suitable for those with related qualifications or involvement in health, education. social care. or pastoral ministry. Personal experience of eating disorders is also relevant for suitable volunteers as is the context where the course will be run. Of this number, following one-to-one consultations. 26 are already running courses or adding their support to teams olreody doing so. Running our annual conference. tastelife Gathering. online. Attendance tripled to100. and, while we missed being in the same air together. it made possible an inspiring ond informative Soturdoy, greatly enhanced by highly relevant workshops ond o foscinating Q & A session with Boroness Kote Porminter, MP, who is on advocate for eating disorder support. Providing survival 'kits' via our website - targeted resources for those struggling to monoge Covid ond eoting disorders- ond indeed, for thos• just struggling with the former. Being so grateful for support from those who could see the need. Building a lifeboat takes extra resources. and without financial help. we could not have pivoted so effectively for change. We are thankful especially to our regular individual supporters, who give so kindly and generously, ond to gront-giving bodies such os the CAF Resilience Fund, Foyle Foundation. The National Lottery Coronavirus Community Fund, Ecclesiastical Insurance Movement for Good, and the Barbara Word Children's Foundation, to name o few. Income grew in the year. including through our participation in the Big Give Christmas Challenge. As can be seen in the Accounts. all emergency Covid funding was expended within the year. The need for additional funding. however. remains as urgent as ever. if we ore to expand to meet needs. as demonstrated by the waiting lists thot exist for our courses. tastellfe
The lifeboat on mission The community course We have been so glad to offer help to 259 pariicipants adults through our tastelife community course online this year. These have included 201 sufferers and 58 family and friends. Those suffering included a variety of eating disorders and issues. While anyone can sign up for themselves, referrals from IAPT, GP surgeries, CAMHS and others are on the rise. As we continue to sail into unknown waters, we will run the course both online and in person, around the country. The accessible and community-based tastelife course uses interactive, and motivational methods to explain how to make changes in small steps towards health and wholeness. Whether face-to face or via a screen, the course offers sufferers and carers a way forward, and puts the steering wheel firmly in the hands of the sufferer. 'Thank you. I never imagined something was out there that could help me this much. I thought this would be with me forever. but now I have hope I can recover., 'Because of this course, l am going to place greater emphasis on my son's emotional wellbeing and less on the foodlre-feeding. as when he's emotionally secure he feels better about everything including food. .4 Hil$ty Coralt Jicry .11*y09- (om l thi¢r I TAM tastellfe ¥ Tra(YBrown ChÉryl Ro,
The tastelife Youth Track: Understanding Eating Disorders Our preventative resource, the tastelife Youth Track: Understanding Eating Disorders. could well turn into a lifeboat in ils own right. Our new Coordinator has strengthened IL rlla king it suitable for online delivery, and creatin8 backup resources which make it even easier to run. Suitable for KS3 and youth groups, interesied teachers and youth leaders can find out more at via lunch-hour online previews. Linked to the emphasis on good mental health, and ticking the boxes for essential provision, this resource is proving increasingly popular. We aim for it to be life-cha ngi ng for ma ny young people, enabling them to understand and steer clear of eating disorders. We are providing supplemenlary resources for parents too, to iry and reduce Ihe fear around eating disorders, and make helpful conversations possible. The three sessions. provided on USB. focus on understanding and avoiding eating disorders. The course covers: Learning the truth about eating disorders Handling social media positively Positive coping MecInism$ Creating a healthy body image How to help self and others who (re struggling 'Could easily be used by any teacher, whether trained or untrained in eating disorders., (facilitator) "The personal stories helped me understand what It Is really like rather than Just statistics or symptoms" '[ can detect eating disorders now and know what to do if experience it or meet someone who has a disorder.. (young person) STACEY'S S Young p•rson food. f8•lin9 YOUTH TRACK www.tastelifoukorgfyouth-track
The research project Throughout the past year, a research team comprising representatives from Coventry and Worcester Universities and tastelife, have been exploring the impact of the tastelife course through focus groups. tastelife participants from around the country were invited to attend online, with four focus groups resulting. Initial findings in response to questions around The role of religion, spirituality and social media in the journey of eating disorders: a qualitative exploration from participants on an eating disorder recovery programme. were included in the Gathering in November 2020, with further reports still to come: The overall theme highlighted the vital importance of relational support. whether from personal faith, other people or the tastelife course. Theme 2 notes the centrality and complexity of personal faith. Theme 3 veers towards a conclusion that, despite some positives, for those with eating disorder issues 'social media should come with a health warning., We are ready to respond to the future. We are more than ever committed to bringing compassionate understanding and practical help to those who want it. Pre-covid and during Covid and on into the future. tastelife offers hope. support and working tools to sufferers of all types of eating disorders, and those who support them. 'We want to help them make life possible again - and indeed. to encourage them to find a better life that they may ever have had before. Many of us know first-hand whot it is like to wrestle with addictive food behaviour. or support someone who is. and we know that it is not primarily about food. It is about trying to find a way to live life to the full. as we all want to do.. (Course leader and recovered sufferer) tastellfe
Our Aims and Objectives remain the same. no matter the boat To provide resources for eating disorder sufferers. and their carers. with the aim of empowering them with tools towards recovery, in the UK and worldwide. based on caring Christian values of health and wholeness. and open to all. To work with and train professionals in related fields in order to encourage best practice in dealing with eating disorder sufferers and carers. To advance the education of the general public in relating to those with eating disorders.. and their carers. To develop further resourcefulness in response to the issues around eating disorders. To systematlcally assess and evaluate the outcomes and success of our courses. tastelife story As a powerful, pertinent and timely response to the eating disorder epidemic in the UK, tastelife trains volunteers to run a research-based, 8 session community course. This is proving to be a welcome. targeted resource with effective tools for support and recovery, for those who suffer and those who care. It is non-threatening, educational and encourages a self-help approach that really works. It creates a safe. learning environment for sufferers and carers to come together. The material is relevant for most life-stealing eating issues. Both the course and the training are accredited by the University of Brighton Health Sciences. Together with the growing tastelife team, we are working hard to get the course into communities around the country. tastelife is a vibrant and growing charity, which is making a difference to so many lives around the UK. ta5telife provides resources to complement the NH5 and fill the gap in support and treatment for eating disorder sufferers in England and Wales, as well as for those who care for them. tastellfe
There is a gap in care, despite increasing government recognition of the importance of Mental Health, and associated funding. The focus remains necessarily on those who are severely ill, usually with anorexia nervosa; those with bulimia nervosa and binge eating disorder are not prioritised. The average waiting time for waiting for eating disorder treatment is 176 weeks (Delaying for years, denied for months, Beat Eating disorders, 2017). Added to this, there is limited training for GPS who, for example, have to focus on re-feeding and weight restoration. Covid has only worsened these statistics. IAPT, GP surgeries and caring agencies refer to tastelife,. as do many who self-refer. An increasing number of those struggling with eating issues are accessing tastelife resources which are not dependent on professional funding, but on the training of caring volunteers, who can then deliver help in their local communities. Our aspirations for 2021/2022 In person courses: to restart the tastelife course in current and more centres, as Covid restrictions allow, in order to achieve our vision of 50 tastelife centres around the UK in the next three years. This would mean the number of sufferers and carers who will be offered the help they need will reach 1,500. We will do this by training at least 30 new leaders in the next year. Online courses: to continue to offer online courses. We intend to further our reach this way, both for the community course, and the training. We hope to expand the number of people who can access both. To expand our support of all trained leaders, by providing ongoing resources and upskilling opportunities, both in person and online. To expand the rollout of our preventative resource for schools and youth groups, the Youth Track, in response to the heightened need for mental health support caused by the Covid sltuation. To continue to develop an effective social media presence that offers helpful information about eating disorders to young people, in order to arm them against them. tastellfe
To launch more resources online - a dedicated stream of webinars for regular support and upskilling of our wonderful tastelife course leaders; plus an outward-facing stream for those who would like to know more about eating disorders and how to respond to them - from professionals to families. To scope out both a teenage version of the community course and a primary school version of the Youth Track. To continue respond appropriately and creatively to the Covid situation, with targeted resources for those both inside and outside the tastelife community. To continue to explore sources of ongoing financial support via grants and regular giving. To continue to explore collaborative working with other eating disorder charities. To continue our liaison with the NHS and CAMHS, through referra15 and links in communities where the tastelife course is running. To gain additional accreditation with OCN London for our courses and training. To host tastelife information-and-help stands when that becomes possible again. To continue streamlining our data processing and daily systems to ensure Sustainability and fast response times to enquiries. To always be available to callers in times of crisis. tastellfe 10
Our Trustees and Advisory Board: Zoe Macnaughton - Acting Chair and Social Media Bob Dudley - Secretary Tanya Pengelly - Safeguarding Dr Ros Simpson - Trustee, training and medical advisor Paul Archer - Trustee. Advisor on Development and Fundraising Joanne Porter - Trustee, Senior Lecturer in Occupational Health Debbie Niblett - Treasurer Trustees are inducted and trained in awareness of both trustee responsibility, and eating disorders where necessary. The trustees give valued support to the CEO, Office Manager, Network Coordinator, Youth Track Coordinator and Communications Coordinator,. and regularly revise and update the governance policies, i ncluding Risk, Safeguarding. and Financial Procedures. 'Having to confront and acknowledge my problems has been very painful. However, I have come to believe that there might be a way out. Having such support and listening to others. as well as talking about practical strategies. has been a lifeline for me. I have no illusions that recovery will be easy. though. I thank you all for everything.. (Sufferer on tastelife course) tastellfe 11
| TASTELIFEUK Statement of Financial Activities for the year ended 31st March 2021 Income and Expenditure Receipts Incoming Resources Training Course Income General Sales Regular & One Off Donations Big Give Donations Gift Aid on above Donations Non-restricted grants Covid-19 Support Grants Course Income Schools Work - Youth Track Grants & Income Total Incoming Resources Expenses Resources expended Costs of Charitable Activities Costs of Covid-19 activities Fundraising Cost of Governance Activities Network Growth and Promotion Resources and Training Schools Work - Youth Track Total Outgoing Resources Net Incoming Resources Net movements in funds Total funds brought forward Total funds carried forward |
Last Year Total Total Funds Funds 2021 2020 £ £ 6,280 8,205 5,181 1,642 23,648 19,167 19,753 0 2,900 0 22,100 13,850 22,851 0 3,288 677 22,246 6,978 128,247 50,519 30,801 35,467 22,365 0 5,470 2,389 350 350 1,626 9,510 1,634 7,372 8,186 11,334 70,432 66,422 57,815 -15,902 57,815 -15,902 28,650 44,552 86,465 28,650 |
Last Year Total Total Funds Funds 2021 2020 £ £ 6,280 8,205 5,181 1,642 23,648 19,167 19,753 0 2,900 0 22,100 13,850 22,851 0 3,288 677 22,246 6,978 128,247 50,519 30,801 35,467 22,365 0 5,470 2,389 350 350 1,626 9,510 1,634 7,372 8,186 11,334 70,432 66,422 57,815 -15,902 57,815 -15,902 28,650 44,552 86,465 28,650 |
|---|---|---|
| -15,902 | ||
| 44,552 28,650 |
The net movement in funds referred to above is the net incoming resources as defined in the Statement of Recommended Practice for Accounting and Reporting issued by the Charity Commission for England and Wales and is reconciled to the total funds as shown in the Balance Sheet that follows.
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TASTELIFEUK Statement of Financial Activities as at 31st March 2021 Balance Sheet 2021 2020 Fixed Assets Tangible Fixed Assets Investments Total Fixed Assets Current Assets 90 Cash at bank 85.561 86.465 28,560 28,650 Total Current Assets Creditors amounts due within one year Net Current A55etS 86,465 28,650 Total Net Assets Reserves Reserves 4.100 Unrestricted income funds Unrestricted revenue accumulated funds 80.065 24,SSO Total Charit Funds For the year in question the CIO was entitled to exemption from audit, however in accordance with section 43 of the Charities Act 1993 the accounts have been examined by an Independent Exmainer whose report is annexed to these accounts. The Trustees acknowledge their responsibilities for complying Wlth the requirements of the Act with respect to accounting records and the preparation of accounts. Signed.. Bob Dudley On behalf of Treasurer 13
CHARITY COMMISSION FOR ENGLAND AND WALES Independent examiner's report on the accounts Section A Independent Examiner's Report Roport to th• trust••81 n*mbers of IAST£LIFg On accounts for the year ended Zl" MeQ4 202L Charity no (if any 11fj851 Set out on pagos 1- 13 I report to the trustees on my examination of the accounts of the above charity (he Trust.) for the year ended Responsibilities and As the charity truste8s of the Trust, you are responsible for the preparation basls of report of the accounts in accordance with the requirements of the Charities Act 2011 {'the Act")- I report in respect of my examination of the Trust's accounts carried out under section 145 ofthe 2011 Act and in carying out my examination, I have follow8d the applicable Directions given by Ihe Charity Commission under section 145{SJ(b) of the Act. I have completed my examination. I confimi that no material matters have come to my attention (other than that disclosed below ') in connection with the examination which gives me cause to believe that in, any material respect.. accounting records bvere not kept in accordance with section 130 of the Act or the accounts do not accord with th8 accounting reGords Independent examiner's Statement I havè no conc8rn6 and have come across no othér matters in connection with the 8xamination to which attention should bé drawn in order to enable a proper understanding of the accounts to be reached. ' Please del8t8 the words in the brackets rfthey do not apply. Signed: 301• 2021 Nam8: Relevant profe8slonal quallflcatlon(s) or body (it any): MoioK MÉaf CITP EA- Address: ? IUV Bth2L kn) OL7D IER October 2018
Section B Disclosure Only complete if the examiner needs to highlight matters of Goncern (see CC32, Independent examination of charity accounts.. directions and guidan for examiners). Givo hore brief details of any items that the oxaminor wishes to disclosè. NIONI . IER October 2018