Proven to make a real difference in people’s lives all while delivering net positive ROI
Discover validated clinical outcomes and financial ROI
Find out how global forward-thinking companies are using Spring Health™.
Meet our community of mental healthcare professionals.
Learn more about Precision Mental Healthcare.
Explore our safe, ethical use of AI
5
min read
5
min read
5
min read
5
min read
Behavioral health support is only as good as your ability to prove it’s working. Here’s how measurement-based care brings clarity and confidence.
Your people need better mental health support, and your leadership team needs to see that it’s working.
But traditional EAPs continue to fall short. Meanwhile, behavioral health needs are rising across every industry, and employee engagement is still lagging.
It’s no longer enough to offer mental health benefits to check a box. Those benefits have to make a real difference. That means helping employees feel better, perform better, and stay engaged while showing measurable outcomes along the way.
That’s where measurement-based care (MBC) comes in. It brings structure, accountability, and precision to mental health support so organizations can move from good intentions to real impact.
According to Spring Health’s 2025 commissioned study conducted by Forrester Consulting, 73% of employers are interested in MBC as part of their mental health strategy. But among providers, adoption remains low, and many employers aren’t demanding more.
So what’s getting in the way? And how can organizations prioritize benefits partners who deliver measurable outcomes?
Our Forrester study, Mental Health At Work: The Benefits Gap and How To Close It, takes a closer look at these questions—highlighting where gaps remain and how forward-thinking organizations are closing them.
Let’s break down why outcomes matter, how MBC supports employee mental health, and what it takes to make it work.
Spring Health’s 2025 commissioned study conducted by Forrester Consulting tells a concerning story about the effectiveness of employee mental health benefits.
Traditional workplace EAPs aren’t built for today’s employee needs.
Forty-four percent of employees report feeling more stress now than five years ago. Although 45% of surveyed employees have access to traditional EAPs, only 30% find their offerings ideal. Just 55% of employees say they’re very or extremely likely to use these supports.
Most employees (74%) feel only moderately supported by their organization’s EAP. These numbers represent a disconnect between what’s offered and what employees are looking for, impacting engagement and ROI.
Traditional EAPs often involve:
Most critically, they lack the data infrastructure necessary to measure whether care is actually improving people’s mental health. Without measurement, treatment decisions are based on gut feelings rather than clear data.
Where there’s no data, there’s no proof of impact, no insight into ROI, and no pathway to meaningful improvement. So, what does MBC look like in practice?
What exactly is measurement-based care? At its core, MBC is a data-informed approach to treatment under which client symptoms, functioning, and progress are consistently measured using evidence-based clinical assessments.
This starts the moment someone enters care. Measuring symptom acuity provides insight into:
Throughout their care journey, regular touchpoint assessments capture symptom changes and progress, giving real-time feedback to providers and informing treatment decisions and adjustments. When done right, it offers a framework for precision mental healthcare.
For employers, MBC offers visibility into whether care is working. Organizations gain the ability to track macro-level data like engagement rates, improvement percentages, population-level insights, and concrete ROI metrics.
MBC provides the accountability lever that directly connects investment to measurable program impact.
From an employee perspective, MBC means faster improvements, better personalization, and more effective provider matching. It doesn’t add friction to care. Instead, it improves outcomes, reduces unnecessary sessions, and allows providers to pivot quickly when treatment isn’t working.
When done well, MBC supports moving treatment away from guesswork toward quantitative, outcome-driven care.
Despite its clear benefits, several significant barriers prevent effective MBC use in employee mental health support programs. Understanding these challenges is the first step toward overcoming them.
Over the next three years, surveyed employers expect their reliance on traditional EAPs to decrease 45% to 38%. Instead, they’re investing strategically in several key areas by:
The most effective training does more than impart basic awareness. It focuses on developing leaders’ emotional intelligence and ability to inspire hope. These are critical skills for creating cultures where employees feel safe seeking mental health support.
Perhaps most importantly, leading employers use outcomes data in their high-level decision-making process.
Let’s talk about how to implement measurement-based care successfully.
Start with the right partner. Look for mental health benefits vendors who can handle the heavy lifting—those offering validated screening tools, longitudinal outcomes tracking capabilities, and seamless integration across all systems. Without a robust technology infrastructure, scaling MBC is nearly impossible, especially for large organizations.
Prioritize centralized data collection and analysis. An ideal solution should feed insights into every aspect of a mental health solution, enabling automated check-ins, real-time alerts for providers and members, and comprehensive reporting that demonstrates clear ROI.
Focus on key capabilities when evaluating vendors. Ensure they offer real-time data feedback loops, facilitate provider adherence to MBC protocols, track longitudinal outcomes across all care modalities (therapy, medication management, coaching, digital experiences), and deliver clear ROI reporting.
Create accountability at every level. MBC is proven to improve clinical outcomes, so if a solution doesn’t integrate measurement into every aspect of its program while actively pushing adoption, it’s not focusing on what matters most.
Invest in change management. Even the best technology requires organizational support. Plan for leadership training, clear communication about privacy protections, and ongoing education about combating stigma and the benefits of measurement-based care.
At Spring Health, measurement-based care isn’t just a concept—it’s at the heart of how we deliver precision mental healthcare. We’ve built an approach that makes MBC real, scalable, and effective for the people who need it most.
Here’s how we make it work:
From the start, members complete clinically-validated assessments that guide personalized provider matching and care planning. Throughout treatment, we continue gathering insights through regular check-ins so providers can adapt care in real time, not in hindsight.
It’s all part of making care more connected, responsive, and effective because mental health support should work for every person, every step of the way.
Spring Health’s approach directly addresses Forrester Consulting's key recommendations for employers ready to transform their mental health programs:
Measurement-based care is no longer optional. The data is clear, the need is urgent, and the solutions exist. Organizations that invest in measurable, effective care models see improvements in mental health outcomes, retention, productivity, and ROl.
Employees are asking for better mental health support, and executives are demanding proof of ROI. When implemented well, MBC delivers both. The 73% of employers interested in measurement-based care have the right instinct.
The future belongs to organizations that measure what matters, act on insights, and continuously improve their approach to employee mental health. Now is the time to make sure your organization is among them.
The Forrester study offers a closer look at how leading employers are making this shift and how you can too.
Namrata Doshi is the Senior Manager of Clinical Product on the Medical Affairs team at Spring Health, where she brings her background as a licensed psychologist to inform evidence-based product strategy and clinical innovation. She’s passionate about building solutions that improve mental health outcomes at scale. Outside of work, Namrata enjoys fitness classes, traveling with her family, and keeping up with her two little ones.
June 5, 2025
June 2, 2025
May 29, 2025
May 19, 2025
Our newsletter delivers expert insights, personal stories, and practical strategies straight to your inbox. Join us to better support your team’s mental health.
Already a member?
Sign in or sign up
Want to join our provider network?
Apply here
Get in touch
©2025 Spring Care, Inc. All rights reserved.
Report non-compliance by accessing the Integrity Hotline (833) 490-0007