In the face of the pandemic, the demand for mental health support has skyrocketed. While employers have prioritized making support available, there simply aren't enough therapists to go around.
More than 150 million people currently live in areas that have
To solve this issue, mental health professionals need more training support and a faster licensing process, says Rachel McCrickard, CEO and co-founder of Motivo Health, a virtual licensing platform. While issues like burnout and retirement are all factors playing into the therapist shortage, the lack of licensing opportunities trumps them all, especially in high-need areas.
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"New therapists go to grad school for a master's degree and then after that, have to work under the professional license of another therapist, called their clinical supervisor," McCrickard says. "They're responsible to find someone to supervise their hours and they pay that person over the course of two years."
McCrickard faced this challenge during her own training — because she lived in a small town in Georgia, she had to drive two hours to Atlanta once a week for her session with her supervisor — a commute many aspiring therapists can't always make. For those outside of major cities, this licensing requirement can be an impossible hurdle.
"Sixty-four percent of people who get a master's degree in counseling don't ever complete their hours," McCrickard says. "That means we're losing over half of the possible therapist supply before they even get started."
Inspired by her own struggle and the
To begin their supervised hours, a counselor can either pay a $75 an hour weekly fee, or work with a group for $55-65 per hour. Motivo also offers custom pricing for clinics looking to subsidize the cost of their clinical interns' supervised hours. Then, counselors can book their introductory call with the supervisor of their choice and begin their sessions.
"I wanted to create an easier way for rural underserved people to finally be able to find a clinical supervisor and complete their hours so that they could become fully licensed therapists," McCrickard says.
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McCrickard also ensured that Motivo's offering of supervisors was diverse — 37% of their
"Clinicians of color are disproportionately impacted by the licensing exam," McCrickard says. "They don't have the same pass rates as their colleagues and there are some racial determinants that are causing clinicians of color to not be able to pass the exam. So that's something we're really looking at."
By focusing on underserved populations of clinicians, Motivo is making it possible for those individuals to work in underserved communities desperate for care. The goal is to create more pathways to licensure, so that as more people seek help, it will be there for them.
"Our differentiator is definitely what we're doing around supervision and the workforce, but I am seeing a lot of niche treatment, which I think is so important," McCrickard says. "It's serving a different part of a really big problem, which is our nation's mental health."