Tag Archives: veterans

Addressing the Veteran Mental Health Crisis

A New Frontier in Healing for Memorial Day Weekend

Addressing the Veteran Mental Health Crisis

by Braden Kelley and Art Inteligencia

As a nation, we have an enduring obligation to the brave individuals who have served in our military. On this Memorial Day weekend, while we honor their sacrifice, we must also look toward a future where we care for the psychological wounds of war. One of the greatest challenges we face is the veteran mental health crisis, with high rates of PTSD, depression, and suicide. Emerging research suggests that psychedelic treatments could significantly alleviate these conditions, providing a new pathway to healing that we cannot afford to ignore.

Understanding the Crisis

The statistics are alarming. According to the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA), approximately 17 veterans die by suicide every day. Furthermore, the VA estimates that around 15% of Vietnam veterans, 12% of Gulf War veterans, and 11-20% of veterans who served in Operations Iraqi Freedom and Enduring Freedom suffer from PTSD in a given year. Traditional treatments like psychotherapy and pharmacotherapy have proven beneficial for some, but many veterans experience symptoms that persist despite these interventions.

The Promise of Psychedelics

In recent years, researchers have turned their attention to the therapeutic potential of psychedelic substances such as MDMA, psilocybin, and LSD. These substances are showing promise in treating PTSD, depression, and other mental health issues. A landmark study conducted by the Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies (MAPS) in collaboration with the VA found that 67% of participants treated with MDMA-assisted therapy no longer met the diagnostic criteria for PTSD after three sessions. This is a groundbreaking finding that cannot be ignored.

Similarly, psilocybin, the active compound in “magic mushrooms,” has shown potential in alleviating depression and anxiety symptoms in numerous studies. A study from Johns Hopkins Medicine demonstrated that psilocybin-assisted therapy resulted in rapid and sustained reductions in depression severity, with effects lasting for weeks and even months. The therapeutic mechanisms of psychedelics, which include altering neural network connectivity and promoting emotional processing, offer a new realm of possibilities for treatment.

Legal and Regulatory Challenges

Despite promising results, the legal status of these substances remains a significant barrier. Classified as Schedule I substances under the Controlled Substances Act, they are currently deemed to have “no accepted medical use.” However, as the evidence base strengthens, there is growing momentum for reevaluating this classification. States like Oregon and cities such as Denver have decriminalized psilocybin, paving the way for broader acceptance and access.

Building a Comprehensive Support System

To address the veteran mental health crisis effectively, we must take a multi-faceted approach:

  1. Policy Revision and Advocacy: It is crucial for policymakers to prioritize the revision of regulations surrounding psychedelics. We need comprehensive legislative efforts to reclassify these substances, allowing for more extensive research and greater accessibility.
  2. Research and Training: Increased funding for research into psychedelic-assisted therapies is essential. Universities, independent research organizations, and the VA should collaborate to expand clinical trials. Alongside research, training programs for mental health professionals must be developed to ensure they are well-equipped to provide these treatments safely and effectively.
  3. Education and Awareness: Public awareness campaigns can help destigmatize mental health and psychedelic treatments. Stories of healing and recovery should be shared, and educational resources must be made available to veterans, their families, and the general public.
  4. Holistic Care Models: Veteran care must incorporate holistic and integrative approaches, including mindfulness, nutrition, and community support, alongside psychedelic treatments. These support systems are vital for sustaining mental health and can multiply the therapeutic effects of psychedelics.
  5. Veteran-Centric Programs: Programs tailored specifically to veterans’ unique experiences and needs should be developed. Peer support systems, where veterans can share their experiences and support one another through healing, can enhance recovery outcomes.

The Role of Community

Community plays a pivotal role in healing. As a nation, we must foster environments that not only support veterans but actively engage them in the healing process. Community centers focused on veteran well-being, alongside integration programs that help veterans transition back into civilian life with purpose and support, can be transformative.

The Moral Imperative

As we commemorate Memorial Day, we must also reflect on our moral duty to those who have served. The veteran mental health crisis is a call to action—an opportunity not only to acknowledge the sacrifices of our military personnel but to invest in their healing and well-being. Psychedelic treatments represent a beacon of hope, backed by rigorous science and positive outcomes. It is essential for us to come together as a society, to push for changes that reflect our commitment to caring for veterans in the most effective and compassionate ways possible.

Conclusion

The journey to mental health recovery for veterans is not an easy one, but it is a journey we must undertake collectively. By embracing innovation and fostering an environment of openness and support, we can lead the way in addressing the mental health crisis that afflicts our veterans. The time to act is now. With courage, compassion, and collaboration, we can chart a course toward healing and honor the legacy of those who have served with dignity and responsibility.

In the spirit of unity and progress, let us stand together to advocate for effective solutions and a brighter future for all veterans. Their healing is our mission. Let us not falter in this duty.


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Image Credit: Microsoft CoPilot

Content Authenticity Statement: Most of the paragraphs in the article were created with the help of OpenAI Playground.

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The Experience Metrics That Matter

Measuring the Success of Human-Centered Design

The Experience Metrics That Matter

GUEST POST from Chateau G Pato

In the world of human-centered change and innovation, we passionately advocate for putting people first. We champion empathy, user research, iterative prototyping, and the relentless pursuit of meaningful solutions to real human problems. But how do we prove its value? How do we measure the success of truly human-centered design (HCD) in a world often fixated on traditional business KPIs?

Too often, organizations fall back on proxy metrics: conversion rates, bounce rates, or even feature adoption without truly understanding the quality of the experience. These are important, but they don’t tell the whole story. The true impact of human-centered design (HCD) lies in its ability to foster engagement, satisfaction, and loyalty by creating experiences that genuinely resonate with users’ needs and emotions. As leaders, we need to move beyond vanity metrics and embrace a more holistic, experience-driven measurement framework that directly reflects the human impact, and crucially, links back to measurable business value.

Beyond the Obvious: Unpacking Experience Metrics

Measuring human experience requires a blend of quantitative data and qualitative insights. These two forms of data are symbiotic; quantitative metrics tell you what is happening, while qualitative insights explain why it’s happening. Here are the categories of metrics that truly matter:

1. Usability & Efficiency Metrics (The “Can They Do It?” Factor)

These classic metrics evaluate how easily and effectively users can achieve their goals.

  • Task Completion Rate: The percentage of users who successfully complete a defined task. A core indicator of basic functionality and intuitive design.
  • Time on Task: How long it takes users to complete a specific task. Lower is often better, indicating efficiency and reducing user frustration.
  • Error Rate: The number of mistakes users make when interacting with a product or service. Fewer errors imply clearer design and a more forgiving user interface.
  • System Usability Scale (SUS): A quick, reliable questionnaire (10 items) that gives a subjective measure of usability, providing a standardized score for comparison.

2. Satisfaction & Emotional Connection Metrics (The “How Do They Feel?” Factor)

These delve into how users feel about their interaction, which is crucial for loyalty and advocacy. These are often captured through direct feedback.

  • Net Promoter Score (NPS): Measures user loyalty and willingness to recommend. It’s a powerful proxy for overall satisfaction and brand affinity, directly impacting word-of-mouth growth.
  • Customer Satisfaction Score (CSAT): Directly asks users about their satisfaction with a specific interaction or aspect of the product/service. Context-specific and highly actionable.
  • Customer Effort Score (CES): Measures how much effort a customer has to exert to get an issue resolved, a request fulfilled, or a product purchased/returned. Lower effort correlates strongly with higher loyalty and reduced support costs.
  • Emotional Response Metrics: Through qualitative feedback (interviews, open-ended surveys), sentiment analysis, or even biometric data (if appropriate), understanding the emotional journey (e.g., frustration, delight, confusion) provides invaluable why behind the numbers.

3. Engagement & Retention Metrics (The “Will They Come Back?” Factor)

These show whether the experience is compelling enough to keep users coming back and deeply involved.

  • Repeat Usage/Purchase Rate: How often users return or make repeat transactions. A strong indicator of sustained value and an enjoyable experience.
  • Churn Rate: The percentage of users who stop using a product or service. High churn often points to a failing experience that needs immediate HCD intervention.
  • Feature Adoption Rate: While not a vanity metric if tied to deeper goals, it shows how readily users embrace new functionalities that are designed to help them, indicating perceived value.
  • Lifetime Value (LTV): The total revenue a business expects to earn from a single customer over their relationship. A truly human-centered experience drives higher LTV by building lasting relationships.

“Measuring human-centered design isn’t just about counting clicks; it’s about quantifying empathy. It’s about understanding if we’ve truly made someone’s life better, easier, or more enjoyable, and how that translates to sustainable business value.”
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Connecting Experience Metrics to Business Outcomes

The beauty of well-executed HCD is that improved experience metrics directly correlate with significant business advantages:

  • Increased Revenue: Higher NPS and CSAT lead to greater customer loyalty, repeat purchases, and referrals. Reduced CES frees up customer service resources and improves conversion rates.
  • Reduced Costs: Lower error rates and improved usability mean fewer support calls, less rework, and faster training. Increased retention reduces customer acquisition costs.
  • Competitive Advantage: A superior, more empathetic user experience becomes a powerful differentiator in crowded markets, leading to stronger brand equity and market share.
  • Innovation Velocity: Understanding user pain points through these metrics provides clear direction for future innovation, ensuring product development is always aligned with genuine needs.

Case Study 1: Airbnb and the Power of Experience-Driven Growth

The Challenge:

In its early days, Airbnb struggled with user trust and getting hosts to provide appealing listings. Many early photos were low quality, leading to poor booking experiences and slow growth. Traditional metrics might have focused on mere listing numbers.

Human-Centered Design Intervention:

Instead of scaling marketing, Airbnb’s founders went to New York, noticed the low-quality photos, and realized the problem was a lack of user-generated experience value. They began offering professional photography services to hosts, not just as a perk, but as a core design intervention. They also invested heavily in designing a seamless, trustworthy two-sided marketplace, focusing on host and guest profiles, reviews, and secure payment systems. The goal was to reduce anxiety and build emotional safety into every step of the booking process.

The Experience Metrics Impact:

This HCD approach directly impacted booking conversion rates, but more importantly, it skyrocketed user satisfaction (CSAT), which drove repeat bookings (retention) and positive word-of-mouth (NPS). By focusing on the end-to-end human experience—from initial search to post-stay review—Airbnb fostered deep loyalty, proving that investing in experience design translates directly into exponential business growth and market leadership. The photography intervention alone reportedly doubled weekly revenue in some cities, demonstrating a clear ROI from HCD.


Case Study 2: The Redesign of the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) Website

The Challenge:

For years, veterans faced a fragmented, confusing, and often frustrating digital experience when trying to access critical services (healthcare, benefits, education) from the VA. Multiple websites, inconsistent navigation, and complex jargon led to high customer effort (CES) and low task completion rates for vital actions.

Human-Centered Design Intervention:

The VA launched a massive HCD initiative, consolidating over 400 disparate websites into a single, unified VA.gov platform. The process began with extensive user research, involving thousands of veterans and their families, to map their journeys and identify pain points. Designers focused on simplifying language, creating intuitive navigation, and prioritizing the most critical tasks. The design was iterative, with continuous user testing and feedback loops at every stage.

The Experience Metrics Impact:

The redesign dramatically improved Task Completion Rates for key services and significantly reduced Customer Effort Score (CES). Veterans reported being able to find information and apply for benefits much more easily, leading to a palpable increase in overall satisfaction (CSAT). While direct revenue isn’t the goal, the reduction in support calls due to self-service, the improved access to benefits, and the enhanced trust in government services all represent immense value, directly attributable to a rigorous human-centered design process focused on alleviating user pain and delivering an efficient, empathetic experience. This translates into operational cost savings and improved public service outcomes.

Practicalities: Collecting the Right Data

Collecting these metrics effectively involves a multi-pronged approach:

  • Analytics Tools: For quantitative metrics (time on task, completion rates, churn), robust analytics platforms are essential.
  • Survey & Feedback Tools: For NPS, CSAT, and CES, integrate in-app surveys, email questionnaires, and feedback widgets strategically.
  • User Research: Conduct regular qualitative interviews, usability testing, and ethnographic studies to uncover the why behind the numbers. This is where true empathy is built.
  • Customer Service Data: Analyze support tickets, call logs, and chat transcripts for recurring pain points and emotional language.

The challenge lies not just in collecting data, but in synthesizing it into actionable insights that fuel continuous, human-centered improvement.

Measuring the success of human-centered design goes far beyond simple A/B tests. It requires a commitment to understanding the full spectrum of the human interaction: how easy it is, how it makes people feel, and whether it builds lasting relationships. By diligently tracking and acting on these experience metrics, leaders can not only justify their investment in HCD but also continuously refine their offerings to create a truly better world for their users, one thoughtfully designed interaction at a time.

Extra Extra: Because innovation is all about change, Braden Kelley’s human-centered change methodology and tools are the best way to plan and execute the changes necessary to support your innovation and transformation efforts — all while literally getting everyone all on the same page for change. Find out more about the methodology and tools, including the book Charting Change by following the link. Be sure and download the TEN FREE TOOLS while you’re here.

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