Effective psychotherapy. If “just talking” to friends benefitted people 80% of the time (which is the success rate for therapy), we’d be out of work. In reality, most effective mental health clinicians have a waiting list.https://twitter.com/morganhousel/status/1157714756674969600 …
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Replying to @DrSepah
2) ..that digitally assesses where one is on the mental health disorder spectrum. That information can be sent to multiple therapists 1 to N to determine a best match (ideally data is from quant tracking of all patients psych has had most success treating)
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Replying to @_patriciamou @DrSepah
If matching by “effective outcomes” did exist there would be more incentive for clinicians to give clients the “minimum viable treatment” to get best outcome vs. incentives now seem off: more sessions = more money.
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Replying to @_patriciamou
That's a common myth about therapy. Poor providers try to keep patients as long as possible to maximize LTV via # of sessions = dependence. Quality providers try to get patients better ASAP since they know they'll refer all their friends, which is organic growth = independence.
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Fascinating! Makes a lot of sense. Growth funnels + loops in product and therapy seem to have many parallels.
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