This year could be a record-setting year for VC investments in mental health and wellness.
It’s one of the reasons Vator and HP focused on this topic during our second of four SplashX Invent Health salon-styled evening gatherings this year.
As we do for all our Invent Health salons, we have a VC panel taking a deep dive into this topic for almost an hour, which invariably is never enough time.
The discussion ranged from how we innovate around diagnostics, treatment and prevention, to how we change perverse economic incentives that often have clinicians prescribing expensive drugs vs providing alternative treatment solutions, such as cognitive behavioral therapies.
The panel consisted of moderators Archana Dubey (Global Medical Director, HP Health Centers, HP) and Bambi Francisco Roizen (Founder and CEO, Vator) and panelists Ambar Bhattacharyya (Managing Director, Maverick Ventures), Billy Deitch (Principal, Oak HC/FT), Hubert Zajicek (CEO, Health Wildcatters), Stephanie Tilenius (Board Director, Investor, Vida Health), Liz Rockett (Investor, Kaiser Permanente Ventures), Lisa Suennen (Senior Managing Director of Healthcare, GE Ventures).
Dr. Dubey kicked things off by asking each member of the panel to talk about their philosophy when it comes to investing in behavioral and mental health, as well as some of the companies they have put money into. Here’s how each of them responded.
In my 20 years now of investing, we look at all sorts of mental health companies. We’ve only made a couple of investments and one, Neuronetics, is an investment in the GE Ventures portfolio. It is unique, or almost unique, in that it’s a medical device to treat major depressive disorder, which is very uncommon. There’s a couple of other devices out there that are used to treat mental health disorders non-invasively as well. But we looked at a lot of different things and there’s a lot to say about them.”
From my perspective, we’re in the very early days of what innovation can be in mental and behavioral health. Lisa’s experience doing managed cared in this arena is one of the few examples we have from prior to really the last five to 10 years of innovative ways of addressing things. At KP Ventures, we’ve invested in a few ways of expanding access, including Ginger.io and other tools that are more looking at ways to take modes of treatment that we’ve long known work very well but we rarely deliver at scale, like cognitive behavioral therapy, and investing in the companies that are digitizing that to create radical transformation and access to those sort of things. So Big Health is one of those in the cognitive behavioral therapies space. Omada, of course, is kind of the hallmark of that approach, though they’re a little more focused on chronic conditions.”
As we move the ball forward on making a change and extending a helping hand and helping people, we have to realize that’s not mental health, it is living a balanced life. I’m a physician by training and, viscerally, that’s what it’s all about. One out of three people ends up with depression, or some sort of a mental health issue. The truth is it will hit all of us, or if it’s not us then it’s one of our loved ones, within 20 years, easy. So what is it? It’s about being imbalanced and responding in a way that really causes harm to us or our loved ones or family. All of us need help in that department. All of us do. I think if we can wrap our brains around that then we will embrace it more as a wellness agenda that has to be embraced, as opposed to a mental health issue that some people have.”
I really believe that the forefront of what everyone’s talking about here is these digital therapeutics meeting people where they’re at in a very personalized way, and solving the mental health problem. We all know that a lot subscriptions that are out there are ineffective for a lot of people. They’re expensive but only 23 percent of them are effective, so hopefully digital therapeutics will solve some of that.”
In terms of my own personal interest in the sector, and in this ecosystem, my wife is practicing clinical psychologist. My father-in-law’s a neurologist. My mother-in-law is a psychologist. My wife’s aunt is a psychologist. I have benefited myself, and everyone in my family, from psychologists. It’s something I have compassion about and love hearing about ways that we are destigmatizing this world. A lot of times we talk about mental health, behavioral health, we see it not as an illness that should be treated. Everyone in this room is crazy, that’s what my father once told me. He told me that to say, ‘Don’t worry, everyone’s life might seem perfect but everyone has their issues.’ There isn’t a person who couldn’t benefit from behavioral health, so expanding access, even to people who don’t maybe suffer from deep clinical depression, but just having that place where you can sit down and take a breath and understand what’s going on, that’s my long term dream for what happens in behavioral health in this country.”
From an investing lens, I’ve been interested in mental health in two discreet fashions, because I think the problem has been well stated by everyone here and I don’t think we have a great silver bullet solution for it. So my approach has been two-fold: one is look for new modalities that, I’ll call it, on the fringe of technology that may have an interesting approach for how to look for solutions to mental health. So we’ve been seed investors and early investors in two companies. One is Limbix, which is using virtual reality to treat a host of mental health issues, like depression, anxiety, PTSD, things of that sort. And, in a former life, I was a seed investor in Ginger as well, which is using data from your phone to understand if that’s a leading indication of depression and things of that sort. That’s on one bucket. On the second area, I’ve been interested in mental health and thinking about it holistically. I think my fellow panelist had a great point in that we separate mental health and health all too often, which I think is inappropriate. If you look at the data, folks who have mental health issues tend to have higher medical costs as well from a payer perspective. It’s bizarre that we think about these in an isolated fashion. So one of our most recent investments is in a company called Cityblock.
Cityblock is a primary care focused company on the Medicaid segment, Medicaid and tools. What they’re focusing on is holistic health, so think not just primary care but having a therapist, thinking about the social determinants, what’s happening at home, actually going to their home, looking at what’s in the pantry because these things all have an impact on how people live their life day to day. How happy they are, how sad they are, if they get sick more often. So I’m really interested in both of modalities: the holistic side and the tech side.”