Developing Software Solutions For
Behavioral Health Management

Introduction

This aspect of medicine is broadly understood to include all behavioral health management, including all mental health conditions, substance abuse issues, and emotional wellness. Despite being one of the most important aspects of all healthcare, it is often one of the most challenging to manage. Indeed, the most prevalent conditions managed in behavioral health are generally serious, complex, and/or chronic and associated with significant impairments in quality of life, day-to-day function, and health. Behavioral health conditions tend to require consistent, ongoing intervention – and likely ongoing management. Proper behavioral and mental health management means access to the interventions and support necessary to achieve mental wellness and sustained recovery.
In this capacity, software tools designed to improve clinical documentation, patient engagement, and data analytics reduce friction in the clinical workflow to manage information flows, communications, and care coordination; better capture the informational needs of point-of-care work; bolster overall teamwork among providers and staff; and provide needed data to care teams to enable more individualized and personalized care. Against the backdrop of a rapidly expanding group of new solutions available to help provide better behavioral healthcare to disparate populations, the software will be a key resource moving forward that will help support the delivery of high-quality, coordinated behavioral healthcare.

Understanding behavioral health needs

Behavioral health describes an array of mental health and substance use disorders, including depression, anxiety, bipolar disorder, and substance abuse. It’s an interdisciplinary community of study and practice related to emotions, behaviors, cognitions, and mental wellness, how psychological, emotional, and social factors influence one’s mental health, and how behavior affects well-being and functioning in day-to-day life. It encompasses the spectrum of mental health problems while emphasizing the importance of mental wellness and prevention.
Many factors make behavioral health different from other forms of health care, but perhaps the most fundamental is the nature of these patients’ conditions. Mental health symptoms and mental health diagnoses are complex; they are often difficult to identify reliably or reproducibly in the clinical setting; they are often comorbid; and their effective management, whether through psychotherapy or prescribed medications, is often individualized and dependent upon case history, current symptom presentation, and patient responses to treatment. They also often require lengthy follow-up, with the treatment plan continually adjusted to accommodate a patient’s changing symptoms and needs on an ongoing basis. Some of the bread and butter of behavioral health care are patient education and ongoing assessment, as conditions don’t just disappear when a course of treatment is completed. Patient follow-up may be required over months or even years to maintain therapeutic results and provide individuals with medication management, individual or group psychotherapy, and/or support groups for their ongoing struggles. Issues of stigma, patient engagement, and how the services are accessed are probably higher priorities in behavioral health than in other areas of medicine.

Key features of behavioral health software solutions

Clinical documentation and records management

Documentation and records management are considered to be two of the most important behavioral health software solutions. For example, EHRs developed for behavioral health providers make it possible to comprehensively chart patient information such as assessments, diagnoses, treatment plans, and progress notes. These products differ from the general EHRs developed for medical providers because they were designed specifically for behavioral health providers needing to manage complex symptom profiles and long-term, ongoing therapeutic interventions. Therapeutic interventions can still be documented even if they do not fall within the traditional time frames. They can actively evolve and change over time. An important part of treatment planning integration is the ability of general clinicians to develop, update, and review treatment plans and the signs and symptoms that reflect their patients’ progress (or lack of it) with therapy. An example of this would be to create a custom report to track the response of a patient’s depression following the introduction of a new antidepressant. The ability to document and time-stamp progress with that therapy, among other issues, would ensure that the patient care plan is current and comprehensive.

Patient engagement and communication

Behavioral health software with secure messaging and telehealth functionality improves patient participation and communication. To facilitate communication and foster patient participation, many behavioral health software applications include features such as secure messaging capabilities and telehealth functionality. Secure messaging features allow patients to communicate with their behavioral health providers online safely and securely. This type of secure communication can be helpful in facilitating timely consultations that could be necessary to address questions, clarify one’s treatment plan, or provide follow-up for any concerns that may have arisen since a patient’s last office visit.

Data analytics and reporting

Clinical outcomes can be enhanced with data analytics and reporting capabilities, which allow for ongoing data capture, tracking, and analysis of behavioral health interventions. Tracking tools help monitor patient progress, examine whether treatment is effective, and identify trends and patterns in clinical data. For example, collecting data on symptom change, therapy adherence, and patient/provider satisfaction provides deeper insights into the effectiveness of treatment interventions and allows practice owners to make evidence-based treatment adjustments based on their findings. Reporting features further help generate detailed reports for clinical and administrative purposes, which may include clinical and operational performance metrics such as patient outcomes, treatment effectiveness, and operational efficiency. Having these data-driven figures at one’s fingertips provides a clear understanding of organizational performance and strategic planning opportunities.

Benefits of Specialized Software Solutions

Improved care coordination

Specialized software solutions for behavioral health support care coordination by improving communications between individuals who provide care and the members of their teams and networks. Clinically integrated EHRs and secure messaging tools can share information and organize discussions among all members of a patient’s team on progress and changes to a course of care or a plan of treatment. Coordinated care requires accurate, real-time communication about a patient’s diagnosis, treatment, improvement, or change in condition. Specialized systems built for behavioral health streamline referral and follow-up processes with integrated scheduling and tracking. This reduces the risk of someone slipping through the cracks – such as a patient missing an appointment or not getting a needed referral to a specialist or additional service.

Enhanced patient outcomes

Specialized behavioral health software solutions help improve patient outcomes by offering clinicians deeper behavioral and symptom insight, leading to more individualized treatment plans. Complex, advanced data analytics tools allow clinicians to gain deeper insight into their patients’ progress, identify patterns in data or tracking trends, and make adjustments to their care plans and interventions based on actual patient responses or changes in behavior. The software helps the clinician create a treatment strategy based on individual patient needs, preferences, and circumstances – including specific challenges or problems and previous treatment interactions – that addresses the immediate and overall care needs and optimizes treatment for that patient. It also supports proactive management of behavioral health conditions and helps improve patient outcomes by offering real-time monitoring tools and features that rely on predictive analytics or predicting future behavior based on current patient trends or behaviors. This allows clinicians to respond to any problems in a timely manner. This can and usually does result in improved patient outcomes and a better quality of life.

Operational efficiency

Specialized behavioral health software enhances operational performance across healthcare organizations by automating the administrative aspects of care. Automation of routine processes – including scheduling, billing, and documentation – minimizes the need for manual data input while reducing the administrative errors that inevitably result from human typos and incomplete documentation. Other aspects of software automation streamline the work processes of care providers and free up additional time to focus more on direct patient care.
Key areas where automation can be applied include tools that assist with clinician workload management, patient appointment scheduling, and facility utilization. Resource management ultimately improves operational performance because efficient services can be delivered at a lower cost. By optimizing resource allocation, it is possible to reduce the time that services are unavailable and guarantee health care is provided in a timely manner.

Integration with existing systems

Interoperability challenges

Interoperability with existing healthcare systems and already implemented EHRs introduces several costly barriers to integrating behavioral health software, given the multitude of internal and external system requirements, data formats, standards, and communication protocols that it needs to be compatible with. For example, behavioral health software must be able to work with other existing systems like the EHR, laboratory information systems (LIS), practice management software, etc., for the sharing of data and coordination of care. Technical problems that impact data integration, sharing, and access include structure differences, system-to-system interfaces, etc. Becoming interoperable requires the adoption of standard health information exchange protocols and application programming interfaces (APIs) to enable data to flow smoothly between systems and improve connectivity.

Data security and compliance

Behavioral health software must be not only secure but also compliant with vital privacy rules to ensure that patients’ sensitive data remains protected. Users must employ strong procedures for data encryption, user access controls, frequent penetration testing, and other security procedures to prevent potential intrusions by adversaries and mitigate breaches. Behavioral health software must also comply with a myriad of technical standards and stringent policy regulations, such as the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPAA), on the confidential handling of patient records (protected health information [PHI]). This is another aspect of software security: not just securing the data but also complying with how the software should handle the data – its Hold, Store, and Process rules. Products must be constantly updated to ensure that there are no security gaps, as well as to ensure continued compliant use with evolving applicable laws or standards. In short, preserving data security boils down to protecting patients. Healthcare organizations require data security so they can rely on software systems to keep information secure and to remain compliant with critical local and federal laws and regulations. Both are must-haves for safe and effective patient care.

Challenges in developing behavioral health software

User experience and usability

Developing useful and usable software for all behavioral health users requires careful design decisions, as users’ experience of an application depends on the purpose of use. Clinicians engage with such software to integrate it into their workflow; the software’s interfaces should support this integration, enabling it to be used easily, quickly, and with the required accuracy for documentation and data access. For patients, usability refers to the quality of the human-computer interface so the target audience can easily navigate self-management tools for record-keeping, symptom tracking, exercises, tools, and communication/messaging features for peer or social support.

Data privacy and confidentiality

Perhaps the most significant challenge when developing behavioral health software has to do with the robust protection of sensitive patient information. Because much of the data that this software handles is related to personal mental health records and details of therapeutic treatment, such data requires the highest level of security against unauthorized access and breaches. This requires the meticulous implementation of high-level encryption protocols along with proper authentication and access controls to ensure safeguards for data at rest and in transit. Another challenge involves the myriad of legal and ethical considerations related to data privacy. One such level of consideration would be related to data regulatory compliance with legislation such as HIPAA – a US law that governs health organizations and systems in the United States. Another ethical consideration might involve ensuring transparent use of data, such as informing patients about how their data is collected, how it’s used, and whether it’s being shared. Addressing some of these challenges speaks to concerns about patient trust and ensuring software is effective and legal.

Conclusion

Behavioral health management software plays a significant role in the modern level of care and is imperative in the quality and efficacy of mental health and substance use care. Specialized behavioral health management software connects the world of the patient with the world of a practice or healthcare system, empowering clinicians, case managers, and others to deliver effective and personalized care. Challenges exist in ensuring that systems and all their components are able to communicate and ‘talk the same language’ (interoperability), in maintaining a patients’ data privacy, and in the delivery of an intuitive and user-friendly interface. Despite these hurdles, the benefits of a behavioral health management software integrated environment in care coordination, patient outcomes, and care delivery process function and efficiency are many-fold. As technology continues to advance and evolve, having a rich toolset of integrated and innovative software solutions to meet the complex needs of behavioral health management will enable supportive care and more efficient delivery at the level of an individual consumer.