General


2
Apr 12

Indu Subaiya Interviews Michael Laskoff, CEO, AbilTo

CEO of AbilTo, Michael Laskoff will join us on stage at the Health 2.0 Spring Fling Matchpoint Boston May 14th during the Fireside Chats. He will further discuss his partnership with Aetna and will be joined on stage by Aetna’s Michael Golinkoff and Meg McCabe.

Indu Subaiya: Today, I’m speaking to Michael Laskoff, CEO of AbilTo. Michael, welcome! You’ll be joining us at the Health 2.0 Boston Spring Fling for our Fireside Chat session on May 14th. As you know, Boston is going to focus a lot on partnerships in the Health 2.0 space and you have a very interesting story to share that we’ll get to in a bit. First, I want to talk about the online behavioral health space. We’ve observed your company for a few years, and there’s some really interesting work going on in this space. You are one of the leading innovators, so tell us about AbilTo and walk us through some of your programs today.

Michael Laskoff: Well, first of all, I should thank Health 2.0, which has been a great supporter of AbilTo over the past couple of years, and more specifically, helping us meet Aetna at one of your events. Actually, we were doing our very first demo ever on stage, which was at Health 2.0 in San Francisco, about a year and a half ago.

As you said, AbilTo is attempting to bring innovation into the behavioral health space, not only because behavioral health needs innovation, but because behavioral health is one of the very best ways to help combat rising healthcare costs in general, in critical categories like cardiac patients, diabetics and people who are suffering from chronic pain. If you actually add those three categories up, it accounts for some enormous portion of the amount of money that we spend as a country on the medical healthcare for individuals. But we have a fairly simple epiphany, if you can alleviate depression in individuals reliably, that you can in fact do quite a bit to help not only their mental health outlook but actually their total health outlook. So what’s good for individuals is good also for the people who are paying for their care.

Most people think of The Sopranos, sitting in an office, talking about their childhood to hopefully a very nice therapist. It’s a terrific thing for some people, but for people who have specific depression related issues that are triggered by things like heart attacks, we believe that there’s a far better approach. That approach is to help people change their behaviors in ways that are clinically proven by science to actually help people feel better.

What we do is we offer, in partnership with Aetna for example, a program called Cardiac Health Forum. With Cardiac Health Forum, we identify individuals together who have in fact, recently been hospitalized by a cardiac condition. When they come out of the hospital, Aetna helps us to contact them, with the permission of their member of course, and get them enrolled in a program. The entire program is completed remotely and this is where the technology part comes in. 100% of our services offered are via telephone, but most people actually are doing it via web-based video conference. The web-based program gives people the advantages of being face-to-face, that sense of intimacy and connectedness that we think of, but with convenience and lack of stigma, and doing it on your own time and place of choosing.

All materials are generated by us and we’re recording, in real time, quite a bit of empirical information that then allows us to actually substantiate the degree of improvement that someone is having. Almost 85% of all the people who start one of our programs actually finish. Now, that’s 16 sessions over 8 weeks, which is quite a lot. So, the fact that 85% finishes something we’re excited about. Also, the degree of depression that we’re helping to alleviate is in the neighborhood of anywhere from 75%, and in some cases upwards of 90%. In before and after, on an increasing number of individuals, we are able to track how they are actually doing by way of depression. Working with Aetna and with some of our partners we are now actually beginning to translate what those depression reductions mean in terms of cost savings and claim savings. So that was a long answer but that’s what we do in a very large nutshell.

Indu Subaiya: I recall from my medical school training that the ability to influence recurrence of an event after being discharged from the hospital is very high, just with things like support groups and mechanisms that address stress. I think you can see a real difference in outcomes. So, in that cohort are you focusing on just depression or is it kind of overall kind of lifestyle management issues?

Michael Laskoff: We would say that we are a complement to the kinds of disease management and coordinated care systems that large payers already put into place. By the way and thanks for bringing up the point about recurrence because that really is crucial. If someone has unfortunately had to be in the hospital for a cardiac situation what everyone wants to do is make sure that they don’t have to go back in.

What we do know is that about one in two patients who have been in the hospital for heart related events suffer depression, and it’s effectively one of the leading indicators of not only if they go back into the hospital, but when. One in four depressed individuals will be back in the hospital in six months versus one in four individuals who are not depressed. Their actual time to go back to the hospital is about 42 months, and there is a tremendous difference in terms of length of stay. If you are depressed, on an average, you will be in the hospital about 13 days and if you are not depressed, you will be in the hospital for about 4. It’s worth pointing out that being re-hospitalized doesn’t actually help anyone, doesn’t make people healthier, doesn’t add to their quality of life, per se. It just falls into the rubric of preventable conditions.

So, as I mentioned up to half of all cardiac patients suffer depression and 20% of all people who are diagnosed with Type 2 diabetes suffer depression when they find out that they are, in fact, diabetic. If you look at the number of people who are suffering chronic pain, who are collecting health benefits at this point, an enormous number of them are depressed. So, we are primarily focused on depression, on some anxiety but we don’t do any of the -– the sort of -– I call it almost like exotic things. People who require traditional in-patient care for example, should in fact continue to get that. People who need intensive community based services should in fact get that. This is kind of for the 80% that falls into the everybody else category.

Indu Subaiya: Those are staggering statistics about the role of depression and re-hospitalization after cardiac event. In terms of tracking these outcomes, will you be collecting data on a longitudinal basis or a pilot arrangement to track whether you can make these larger impacts?

Michael Laskoff: Absolutely. As I said, we have been providing program service to Aetna for coming up on about 7 months now. It’s a three months program and we are just getting to the point of being able to do the initial 90 days follow ups. What we know from the clinical literature that’s coming at us is in fact, there is a lot of contention about how one even does that lateral study. There is obviously great enthusiasm on the part of Aetna and some of the other health plans that we talking to at this point. Frankly, the alternatives aren’t very good and there is quite a bit of literature on the somewhat disappointing results of anti-depressants on mild and moderate depression cases. So that, giving them to people, who very frequently are taking many different medications already, doesn’t necessarily improve any kind of outcome and doesn’t really prevent cost. Of course, it’s easy for doctors to prescribe and therefore it becomes very prevalent.

We’re in the process of tracking and it’ll probably take us the better part to 6-9 months to begin to build a compelling, peer-reviewed quality set of figures on that. In the meantime I think what almost everyone is concluding is that what they’re doing currently isn’t coming anywhere near close enough to meeting their needs. So we’re meeting with a great deal of enthusiasm. This year in particular we’re actually trying to get these things implemented faster, particularly because anything anyone can do to cut their re-hospitalization rates prior to 2014 has become a pretty appealing.

Indu Subaiya: Absolutely! To how many people has the Aetna Cardiac Program been made available?

Michael Laskoff: I can’t give you the specifics but what I can tell you it’s a healthy three figure number and we’re increasing the number per week. Aetna is really to be commended, they are a big, complicated system. I think it’s probably rivals the US and the UN rolled into one happy equation. It’s been a lot of work to identify, get gears to mesh, to get these people identified and then deliver.

Aetna isn’t merely suggesting to these folks that they call us, they are actually really getting the permission of that individual, passing that information on to us and we are contacting those people. If Aetna does get a person to us, if we actually get permission to contact that individual, we are actually getting an initial meeting setup with almost half of them. Which when you look at it, the difficulty of just getting people to engage in things that are good for them, it’s pretty extraordinary that we’ve got into that level. We certainly did not start there.

Indu Subaiya: Congratulations on working at a partnership with a large organization like that. That’s a challenge for any young company. As we wind down here Michael, I’m curious because at Health 2.0, we are interested in the journey of young organizations. Tell us a bit about AbilTo in terms of the number of employees, your financing, where you guys at as a company right now?

Michael Laskoff: Of course! Again, I need to go back and say that actually an important part of everything that we’ve done in terms of fundraising and corporate financing and things of that nature, all of it was accelerated by being recognized by Health 2.0 as an innovator. So, again thank you for that. We now have six people full time, and we have over a 100 people — providers, coaches and therapists. The therapists are in 14 or 15 different states. All of whom we have recruited, trained and in fact when they work for us, only follow our methodology.

In terms of development work, we are proud of the fact that we are actually based on angel money only this quarter and management investments. We’ve reached the point where we are crossing into cash flow positive territory on our own, and as a result of that, I’m pleased to say a number of strategic partners have expressed interest in investing. We’re probably looking at taking a small A Round hopefully in the next 90-120 days and we’ll be using that for what I say is the most challenging aspect of operating as a new company in this space, and that is the incredibly long sales cycle to get health plans on board. With Aetna, it was a very fast process, certainly by the standards of the industry. But we don’t thing that will be the case and we hear all kinds of stories of people reporting that it takes 10, 12, 14 months to close partnerships that everybody wants. We are hoping to go quite a bit faster than that but nevertheless, we’ve got to secure lot of resources to get those kind of efforts underway. Hopefully, we will be doing that and we will continue building the organization much faster through the remainder of this year.

Indu Subaiya: That’s really impressive, and one of the things we recognized from our vantage point is exactly what you said, that long runway leading to a deal with these larger players. It’s one of services that we provide, for example, with formats like Matchpoint; to help accelerate those conversations as well. Lastly, as CEO of a Health 2.0 start up, do you want to share one of your lessons learned as a CEO for other tech leaders out there?

Michael Laskoff: Yes, actually just one, which is be very skeptical of the people who tell you that something is impossible. Specifically with regard to the health space because it is very difficult to work with large partners to help them affect a change, but it is entirely possible. Generally it seems to be a factor of how badly you want it. We want it badly, and we are in one of those great situations where as our investors do better, we actually bring more joy and alleviate suffering, on hopefully a very, very large scale. But it’s that sort of dogmatic belief that you can do things that other people have said is too hard, it doesn’t work. It’s the effort that really does seem to make the difference. I wish that we had known sooner how doggedly we had to pursue alignments with the existing payments channels. The fact that we are able to work within existing payment structures, for very large companies, does an immense amount to make our proposition easier. Many other people are out there trying to hack it out, trying to get people to invest in new things that require lot of work on the part of a big partner in order to engage.

Indu Subaiya: Michael thanks for both the inspiration and update on an amazing amount of progress!

March 30, 2012 – By Emily Hagerman

SOURCE: Health 2.0 News


16
Nov 11

Tech takes on sickly health care system

AbilTo, ZocDoc and Medivo offer online tools to improve diagnosis and treatment, and cut costs.

Five years ago, when he was diagnosed with ADD, or attention deficit disorder, Michael Laskoff soon realized just how inefficient the mental health care system is. He had questions about the treatment, which included therapy and behavioral coaching: How long would it last? How much would it cost? How would he know when it was done? The answer he got: It depends.

“Where else in life are you expected to spend so much for something so inconvenient and not know when you’re finished?” Mr. Laskoff wondered.

Frustrated, he started a business that could answer those questions.

Today, his three-year-old Manhattan-based company, AbilTo, provides cognitive behavioral therapy and related types of treatment via phone and video conferencing for patients with conditions such as anxiety and mild-to-moderate depression. A team that includes a licensed clinical social worker and a coach treats individual patients for a fixed period of time and at a fixed price—$2,500 to $3,000. Clients so far include insurance companies and law firms, which offer the counseling to insured clients and employees, respectively.

“For prevalent mental health conditions, like mild and moderate depression, why not create best practices that have a single price, run for a set duration of time and are measureable in outcome?” Mr. Laskoff explained.

AbilTo is one of a growing number of technology companies in New York that are focusing not on the higher-profile world of biotech, but on the slow-moving world of traditional health care. Spurred by new health reform laws, the dire need to save money and the ability to demonstrate measurable results, health IT entrepreneurs are building companies that use crowd sourcing, social media and other Internet-enabled technologies to reduce costs, improve delivery and help consumers take charge of their health care. A nascent network of investors and mentors is spurring them on.

Whether or not the federal health care reform law succeeds is an open question. In the end, say these entrepreneurs, it will be the small startups like themselves that usher in the revolution.

“At the end of the day, it’s the entrepreneurs who are going to make things happen,” said Sundeep Bhan, co-founder and CEO of Manhattan-based Medivo, which collects, organizes and analyzes patient test data for doctors and helps them use it to plan treatment.

New York’s health care industry is huge, providing a big launch pad for IT companies focusing on the sector: In 2009, there were 431,000 people working in the health care sector in the city, according to the Center for Health Workforce Studies at the University of Albany. Dozens of hospitals and thousands of doctors’ office and clinics constitute a ready-made market.

Health care reform and the weak economy are forcing change upon an industry that has traditionally dragged its heels when it comes to adopting new technology. Some companies are springing up to help workers manage their own health care, as insurers and employers shift more of the burden onto them. ZocDoc is one of the best known, having recently banked $75 million in venture capital for its business, which helps consumers find doctors and dentists and book appointments online.

Others, such as AbilTo and Epic Health Group, are bringing online tools to the actual diagnosis and treatment. Founded recently by Dr. Ronald Razmi, a Mayo Clinic-trained cardiologist and former McKinsey consultant, Epic aims to manage disease remotely. A cardiac patient experiencing symptoms, for example, could interact over the Internet with a nurse practitioner or other professional guided by Epic artificial intelligence software. Dr. Razmi recently attracted $4 million in capital from two angel investors and is in talks, he says, with hospitals to provide the service to their patients. He hopes to have a commercially viable product by the end of 2012.

“You’ve shifted a $1,700 dollar emergency room visit to a cheaper online visit,” said Dr. Razmi. “Patients can seek care at an earlier point and not have to be admitted.”
Other companies are exploiting the data side. Medivo Inc. expects to close soon on a $7 million to $8 million round of financing. Crossix Solutions, evaluates the effectiveness of pharmaceutical advertising. Happtique, a subsidiary of the Greater New York Hospital Association, runs an app store for health care providers.

An ecosystem that can sustain entrepreneurs is beginning to form. It includes Health Care 2.0, a meet-up group for health care innovators and Startup Health, a public-private partnership to improve access to capital headed by former TimeWarner CEO Gerald Levin and Steve Krein, co-founder of Organized Wisdom, which helps doctors interact with patients online. Startup Health also runs an “academy” that will take equity positions in companies and provide mentors and other training. Another organization, the two-year old NYC Health Business Leaders showcases and promotes health innovation while the city’s Bio (Eds & Meds) NYC 2020 effort aims to encourage entrepreneurship in bioscience and health care technology.

In another effort to get innovation off the ground, BluePrint, a recently launched health care IT accelerator, has already fielded more than 200 applications for 10 spots in its program starting in January. Winners get $20,000, space for three months and mentoring from a group of 100 venture capitalists, entrepreneurs and health care professionals.

Judith Messina

SOURCE: Crain’s New York Business Article


30
Sep 11

AbilTo Demos at 2011 DC to VC: HIT Startup Showcase as Series-A Finalist

AbilTo CEO, Michael Laskoff, demonstrated the company’s breakthrough approach to mental health as a Series-A finalist of the 2011 DC to VC: HIT Startup ShowcaseMorganthaler Ventures’s nationwide contest to find the most promising health IT startups looking for funding.

AbilTo’s presentation was well received, having captured the attention of leading venture capitalists, angel investors, media outlets, health plans and employers at this invitation-only event. Judges eagerly inquired about collaboration between providers, the ease and effectiveness of evidence-based methods, and client/provider screening processes.

View Michael’s demo at DC to VC below.


29
Sep 11

Michael Laskoff, AbilTo CEO, Speaks about Teletherapy at Health 2.0

HCPLive spoke with AbilTo CEO Michael Laskoff at the Health 2.0 conference in San Francisco about issues including why he believes teletherapy is as good as or better than traditional in-person therapy and how AbilTo measures the quality of the care it.

Listen to the podcast at: http://www.hcplive.com/podcasts/Health-20-Michael-Laskoff-of-AbilTo-on-Teletherapy


19
Sep 11

AbilTo Seeks To Bring Therapy Home With Series A Round

A lot of depressed individuals who wind up on the therapist’s couch would actually fare much better on their own couch, provided the therapist could somehow bring the therapy to them.

This is the thesis at New York-based AbilTo LLC, an under-the-radar provider of Web-based, at-home mental health programs that has been growing its network of doctors and patients thanks to partnerships with top health insurance providers and other groups.

Founded in 2008, AbilTo has raised $400,000 from individuals and company founders, and is currently in talks with several venture firms as it raises a Series A round of up to $5 million, Chief Executive Michael Laskoff said.

The company’s service, which features face-to-face video chat between therapists and patients, is not meant to replace in-person counseling for the seriously mentally ill. The service is geared toward sufferers of mild to moderate depression, who have been found by researchers to benefit from web-based-and even text-based-therapy sessions, Laskoff said.

AbilTo is aiming to shave millions of dollars off the country’s annual health-care spend, he said, by streamlining certain operations and eliminating unnecessary in-person visits, the CEO said.

AbilTo offers a good deal to therapists, he added, as they are able to serve more patients.

In order to grow its network, partnerships with larger players are important. The company has teamed up with health insurer Aetna Inc., Laskoff said. Aetna offers AbilTo services to its members who are recovering from heart attacks, a patient population that is prone to depression.

Additionally, law firm O’Melveny & Myers has launched a program to help new parents transition back into the workforce, and offers counseling through AbilTo’s program.

The service launched commercially less than a year ago and currently has 50 therapists signed on. More than 80 patients have received therapy so far, Laskoff said. The Series A will be used to form new partnerships and grow the network, he said.

The Internet is increasingly being used to cut down office visits that are not strictly necessary.

Earlier this week, Teladoc Inc.–a company offering a similar service, but without the exclusive focus on mental health–raised an $18.6 million Series D round from Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, Cardinal Partners, HLM Venture Partners, New Capital Partners and Trident Capital, VentureWire records show.

By Timothy Hay

SOURCE: Dow Jones VentureWire Lifescience


25
Aug 10

AbilTo Demo at Health 2.0 NYC a Success

Health 2.0 innovators, enthusiasts, providers and experts came out for AbilTo’s demo at the August edition of the Health 2.0 NYC Meetup on August 18th, 2010 at MultiVu PR. The demo was presented by AbilTo CEO, Michael Laskoff.

AbilTo was well-received by Meetup attendees. Laskoff primarily discussed how AbilTo uses Web 2.0 applications to eliminate geographic barriers and fundamentally change traditional approaches to therapy. Using the full suite of APIs available via TokBox, AbilTo has been able to seamlessly integrate video communications into their web experience. The intuitive video chat capability allows AbilTo clients to meet virtually with a therapist, coach or both without having to download software.

Attendees eagerly inquired about collaboration between providers, the ease and effectiveness of evidence-based methods delivered via video conferencing, confidentiality and HIPAA compliance, EMRs and client and provider screening processes.

The August Health 2.0 NYC Meetup was hosted by the New York Healthcare Technology Group – Health 2.0 NYC (http://www.health20nyc.com), a group dedicated to discussing technology innovations that focus on the patient. They look for start-ups and individuals to present technologies such as e-prescribing, social healthcare, innovative use of devices, consumer driven health, data mining, process enhancements using technology and more.

AbilTo’s Health 2.0 NYC demo can be viewed at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rqt4tDI1wko.

AbilTo will also be presenting at the annual Health 2.0 Conference in San Francisco on October 7-8, 2010. More information on the event can be found at http://www.health2con.com.

About AbilTo

AbilTo (http://www.abilto.com) offers face-to-face therapy programs, using video chat, to help individuals manage prevalent behavioral disorders and difficult life transitions. AbilTo programs utilize scientifically proven techniques; provide clients with both a qualified therapist and coach; and differ from traditional therapy by offering a single price and set duration. Current offerings address adult Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD/ADD), panic attacks and helping new mothers confront the difficulties of returning to their careers. AbilTo is privately held and based in New York, NY.

AbilTo Press Contact: Jennifer Feinstein, Marketing Coordinator

jennifer.feinstein@abilto.com, 201-724-8118


26
Apr 10

Welcome

Welcome to the AbilTo blog. We’re introducing it just three years shy of a life altering experience that would ultimately lead to the founding of the company. Back in 2007, I was diagnosed with ADD/ADHD. Being 39 at the time, I was simply staggered, but also grateful. Finally, I could put a name to the ‘demon’ that had been haunting me all those years. Even better, I could do something about it. That consisted of medication, which I still take, and a scientifically validated therapy called cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT). The combination reignited my life.

At the same time, I came to understand just how hard it is to find, purchase and benefit from effective therapy. The traditional approach is simply to difficult to navigate. Good therapists are hard to find and difficult to schedule. The process is open-ended and can be ridiculously expensive. All in all, the stress of seeking help can be just as bad as the issue that makes it necessary.

A new approach was clearly needed. Therapy needed reinvention. That’s why we started AbilTo back in 2008. We provide scientifically validated, team delivered therapies to individuals who suffer from the most common and treatable behavioral disorders – like ADD/ADHD, panic disorder and the sadness/depression that many women unexpectedly experience after the birth of a child. Stated simply, AbilTo makes reliable, quality help available to millions of people.

We do this by connecting each client with a team – consisting of a licensed therapist and behavioral coach – using videoconferencing. Video allows clients to meet face-to-face without having to commute to receive help. Most opt to do this from home – during the evening or weekends. Equally, the team approach makes for more help and rapid progress.

The AbilTo difference doesn’t end there. We offer a free consultation to anyone considering one of our programs. If the program isn’t a good fit, there’s no fee. Moreover, our programs have a clear finish line and set price. Most programs are six to ten weeks.

Simply put, AbilTo offers a better alternative for millions of people. It’s precisely what I would have liked to take advantage of when I learned about my ADD/ADHD.

Going forward, we’ll use this blog as a means of keeping you apprised of significant new developments, both inside and outside of the company. In the meantime, thanks for visiting the site and taking the time to learn about AbilTo.