Extends campus support after hours
Students can use evidence-based tools during nights, weekends, waitlist periods, and between appointments.
For Counseling Centers, Student Affairs, Campus Wellness, and Athletics
Neurture gives students a private, mobile-first way to use evidence-based tools for stress, habits, and substance-use concerns between appointments, after hours, and in the moments when formal support is not immediately available.
Why Teams Look at This
Extends campus support after hours
Students can use evidence-based tools during nights, weekends, waitlist periods, and between appointments.
No new clinical queue required
Neurture is designed to complement existing services without creating another provider dashboard or live response burden.
Private and student-friendly
The format works for students who may resist formal help-seeking but will use a private tool on their own phones.
The goal is not to turn a self-guided tool into campus therapy. It is to give students another credible option when timing, privacy, or overload keep them from live care in the moment.
Where It Fits
Offer a private support tool during waitlist periods, between sessions, or for students who need something practical before they are ready for a live visit.
Use Neurture for stress, nicotine, alcohol, screen-time, and other behavior-change concerns that sit adjacent to formal clinical care.
Student-athletes can access support during travel, injury recovery, performance pressure, and culture-related alcohol concerns.
Relevant for collegiate recovery communities, wellness agreements, and students who benefit from private support outside meeting hours.
Why Institutions Consider It
Start with a full-campus offering or a narrower rollout through athletics, counseling, student affairs, or AOD/recovery programs.
Launch with an email domain, enrollment code, or a tightly scoped distribution approach that fits your existing operational reality.
Institutions can understand whether the benefit is being activated without needing student-level journaling or personal reflections.
The product works best when it is framed as a private support layer that complements counseling and crisis protocols rather than replacing them.
Security, Privacy, and Boundaries
Institutions can review aggregate activation without seeing student-level reflections or journaling. Neurture is built for everyday support, skill reinforcement, and high-friction behavior-change problems, not crisis triage or another live clinical queue.
No. Neurture is not a replacement for counseling, psychiatry, crisis response, or emergency support.
It is designed to complement those services with a private, self-guided layer students can use between appointments and outside business hours.
The strongest fit is for students managing stress, habits, alcohol or nicotine use, screen-time issues, performance pressure, and other concerns that benefit from practical in-the-moment tools.
It can also be useful for athletics, collegiate recovery, AOD prevention, and other student support programs that want a private between-touchpoint tool.
The intended institutional view is aggregate-only. Schools do not need student-level reflections, journaling, or detailed behavioral data to understand whether the benefit is being activated.
Yes. Privacy is a core part of why the model works. Students can use Neurture privately on their own devices without surfacing sensitive content to the institution.
Yes. A pilot is often the right first step, especially when a school wants to test fit through one department or one student population before expanding.
No. The product should sit alongside, not inside, your crisis and acute-risk response system.
The right use case is everyday support and between-appointment reinforcement, not crisis triage.
Next Step
A narrow pilot is often enough to decide whether the model deserves a bigger place in your campus support stack.