Private by default
Participants use Neurture on their own phones, and programs do not need participant-level activity feeds to make the model useful.
For LAPs, PHPs, and Other Professional Assistance Programs
Neurture gives monitored and high-risk professionals a private, mobile-first way to use evidence-based tools during cravings, stress spikes, and off-hours moments without adding another dashboard or monitoring queue for your program.
Why This Model Resonates
Private by default
Participants use Neurture on their own phones, and programs do not need participant-level activity feeds to make the model useful.
No new monitoring queue
There is no provider dashboard to staff and no new admin workflow required to start a narrow pilot.
Built for between check-ins
The strongest use case is support during evenings, weekends, travel, and other moments when a live check-in is not available.
The point is not to replace your structure. It is to give participants a credible support layer when structure is not immediately available.
Common Program Types
Private support for attorneys managing stress, cravings, or recovery work alongside LAP expectations.
A low-friction support layer for clinicians with demanding schedules, stigma concerns, and high relapse risk during off-hours.
Useful when professionals need a private, mobile-first tool that reinforces skills between formal program touchpoints.
Relevant for nurses, pharmacists, therapists, and other professionals who need support without adding visible program burden.
Best-Fit Use Cases
Use Neurture when participants need something concrete after a difficult shift, a triggering interaction, or a late-night craving.
The phone-based format helps when meetings, travel, call schedules, and geographic movement make live support less predictable.
Neurture can reinforce clinician-taught skills after higher-acuity treatment or during lower-intensity monitoring phases.
Participants can revisit grounding, urge surfing, trigger tracking, and cognitive tools without needing to initiate another live conversation.
Operationally Light Rollout
Programs do not need a complex implementation to learn whether the model is useful. The first question is whether a private, mobile support layer makes sense for your participants between formal touchpoints.
Important Boundary
Neurture is not a crisis tool and is not a substitute for your emergency, clinical, or program escalation paths.
Start with one population, one owner, and one explanation of when Neurture should be introduced.
Use an access code, QR, or referral language that fits your current program workflow without creating a new monitoring process.
Look at adoption, qualitative staff feedback, and whether the handoff feels operationally credible before expanding.
No. Neurture is not a replacement for therapy, formal monitoring, drug testing, or clinician-led care.
It works best as a private support layer participants can use between check-ins, meetings, and appointments.
The intended model is aggregate-only. Programs can understand whether access is being activated without needing participant-level journaling, reflections, or tool-use detail.
Participant content remains private and is not surfaced in a provider-facing dashboard.
Yes. One of the main advantages is that participants can use Neurture privately on their own devices, without needing to ask for another live interaction in the moment.
The strongest fit is for professionals in programs where privacy, license concerns, irregular schedules, and relapse risk make between-check-in support especially valuable.
That includes lawyer assistance, physician health, pilot assistance, and other monitored or safety-sensitive populations.
No. Neurture is not a crisis service and should not replace your existing emergency, clinical escalation, or acute-risk protocols.
The right use case is day-to-day support, not overdose risk, suicidality, or acute instability.
Yes. A narrow pilot is the right starting point for most programs. That keeps the workflow simple and lets the team judge fit before expanding.
Next Step
The right first conversation is usually about fit, guardrails, ownership, and whether the model helps your participants without creating operational drag for the program.