OHIO, UNITED STATES — Health experts are urging healthcare providers to take stronger action to close long-standing access gaps of digital mental health for underserved youth, warning that current solutions still fail to reach many of the teens who need support most, according to a MedCity News report.
At the recent Behavioral Health Tech conference in San Diego, industry leaders urged healthcare systems and providers to close the widening access gap through deeper community partnerships, culturally informed design, and equitable delivery models.
Schools, communities drive digital mental health access for teens
For hospitals and health systems, the message from experts was clear: improving reach starts far beyond the clinic walls.
Despite widespread smartphone ownership, basic connectivity remains a barrier that prevents many teens from consistently accessing digital mental health services. That gap, said panelists, demands stronger ties between health providers and local community institutions.
Cigna Healthcare’s senior director of behavioral health, Jason Youngblood, emphasized that schools can serve as powerful access points.
“Distributing through the school systems and making sure your guidance counselors, your nurses are connected, even bus drivers understand what you have to offer and then can talk about it [is beneficial]. … They are truly on the front line of the mental health epidemic,” he said.
Clinicians are faced with an operational necessity: creating referral networks that include not only educators, youth organizations, and public libraries but also pediatric clinics.
Grounding digital mental health consciousness in places where children and teenagers habitually stay, providers might reduce the demand for emergency rooms and primary care units that have already been flooded with patient needs due to the rise of mental health issues among adolescents.
Equally important is cultural alignment. Youngblood noted the need to involve youth, parents, and peers in shaping digital programs, a practice many health systems are beginning to incorporate into patient experience efforts and community health strategies.
Equity, workforce gaps, and emerging outsourcing opportunities
Talkspace Chief Medical Officer Dr. Nikole Benders-Hadi echoed the need for trusted, community-led engagement.
The company’s in-person events at schools and its New York City partnership illustrate how peer-driven outreach, such as “Teenspace Ambassadors” spreading awareness of free online therapy, can strengthen adoption.
“Someone from an underserved or more marginal community may have specific trauma-related needs that you have to be sure that you’re able to address. Also on that care delivery lens, I would say, [it’s important to have] a diverse provider network that is able to understand those needs, adapt those specific care needs,” Dr. Benders-Hadi stressed.
For health systems contending with behavioral health workforce shortages, this issue raises practical questions about staffing models.
Many hospital leaders are increasingly exploring partnerships with outsourced or offshore clinical support vendors, particularly for digital mental health triage, coaching, and asynchronous support, to expand capacity without overburdening local clinicians.
The push to deliver culturally attuned care may further accelerate demand for multilingual, globally distributed mental health professionals who can supplement United States provider networks.
Panelists also flagged persistent inequities in access to coverage.
“I’m concerned that we don’t sometimes offer the Medicaid population nationally access to the same great solutions that the commercial population can experience,” said Mike Franz, executive medical director of behavioral health at Regence Health Plans.
For providers, achieving parity will require not only payer collaboration but also scalable care delivery models that can support high-need, low-margin populations.
As digital tools continue to evolve, the healthcare sector faces a pivotal moment: bridge the access gap now, or risk leaving the nation’s most vulnerable youth behind.