Giving Compass' Take:
- Marissa Plescia reports on UnitedHealthcare and Optum's efforts to assess the effectiveness of digital mental health solutions, highlighting the importance of data-driven analysis.
- How can donors support efforts to evaluate and validate digital mental health solutions, ensuring they are both effective and safe for users?
- Learn more about key issues in health and how you can help.
- Search our Guide to Good for nonprofits focused on health in your area.
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Like many insurers, UnitedHealthcare and Optum are dealing with a surge in digital mental health solutions, according to Dr. Debra Nussbaum, senior director of behavioral health at Optum. And they’re trying to make sure the new solutions are as effective as the traditional solutions. During a recent interview at the Behavioral Health Tech conference, Nussbaum discussed these challenges and the ways she’s tackling them.
One issue Nussbaum is battling is making sure the industry doesn’t “over innovate and lose the effectiveness” when it comes to treating mental health conditions with digital mental health solutions.
“So we’re trying to slow things down, but things keep coming so fast,” she said. “We have a healthcare economics team and we’re trying to do basically an analysis of these virtual solutions, and people are pushing coaching now. Coaching is very popular, and we want to innovate, we want to offer coaching. But is it effective? Is it safe? There are so many innovators in the market. How do I know what I want to back? It can’t be gut.”
So how should healthcare stakeholders measure which digital mental health solutions to work with? Nussbaum said she’s often looking at claims history to see if there’s high engagement and better health outcomes.
“People are the best way to tell if a solution is working,” Nussbaum stated. “If they only have two claims, they’re not engaging people. They’re not connecting with people. I look in the claims data for length of engagement. I know by diagnosis how long someone should be in an episode of care. … I’m looking to see what’s happening with those people, like are they ending up in the ER? Are they ending up in higher levels of care? Are they staying with this solution and then living happily ever after? If we don’t have claims trends on them, I get very worried, because then they’re a brand new solution, and I don’t want my members to be the test case.”
Read the full article about digital mental health solutions by Marissa Plescia at MedCity News.