Crisis Text Line
Crisis Text Line does two things: (1) it provides free, 24/7 emotional support and information to people in crisis, by text. And (2) it leverages its data to improve the world. In March 2019, we exchanged our 100 millionth message, and we’re on track to exchange the next 100 million by February 2020.
According to NAMI, 1 in 5 adults in America experience mental illness in a given year. About 1 in 5 people between ages 13 and 18 will experience a severe mental disorder at some point in their lives. Despite this being a large portion of our population, over half aren't getting the help they need. Stigma and fear of discrimination prevent people from asking for help and lack of access makes it difficult for people who want help to get it. Untreated mental illness has serious consequences for our cities. Suicide is the 10th leading cause of death in the U.S. and the 2nd leading cause of death for people aged 10–34. Mood disorder are the third most common cause of hospitalization in the U.S. for people ages 18 to 44.
We exist to help texters in crisis and we’re able to reach an unserved population.
For example:
35% of our texters are 14-17 years old, and 26% of texters are 18-24. Teens and young adults especially love us because of their affinity for texting (vs. talking on the phone) and because of the privacy that texting offers (which a phone call lacks).
The bottom 10% of zip codes ranked by per capita income make up nearly 20% of our volume (2X over index).
We have a high number of texters from CA, TX, NY, OH, and FL, but we service texters who reach out to us from anywhere in the US.
We all want to be heard. 66% of texters that we serve share something with us that they’ve never shared with anyone else. In this way, we’re a gateway resource to mental health services for texters who didn’t previously have access.
Our solution does two things. First, we provide free, confidential crisis support via text message 24/7 to people of all ages and backgrounds. When someone is experiencing a crisis—whether they’re having suicidal thoughts or they’re stressed out about an upcoming exam—they can text HELLO to 741741 or send us a Facebook message. A machine learning algorithm assesses if the person may be a risk to themselves or others using data we’ve collected around the words and phrases people who are suicidal most often use. If that person is considered high risk, they’re put at the top of our queue. All texters are connected to one of our volunteer Crisis Counselors—a real human who will help them go from a hot moment to a cool calm using empathy, active listening, and de-escalation techniques.
Second, we created the largest mental health data set in the country using aggregated and anonymized data from the conversations we’ve had. And we’ve made it public on crisistrends.org. We leverage this data to map mental health trends across the country and illuminate ways communities can take care of their members. For example, our data shows that the worst time of the year for bullying is in April and May. Knowing this can help schools plan anti-bullying campaigns for those months or have extra resources on campus for those being bullied.
- Promote physical safety by decreasing violence or transportation accidents
- Enable equitable access to affordable and effective health services
- Scale
- New application of an existing technology
Crisis Text Line takes a mode of communication that thousands of people prefer to use every day. Text is discreet and private, giving people a place to be vulnerable no matter where they physically are or who’s sitting next to them. We just get facts over text—we don’t have to decipher what someone’s saying through their tears. With 96% of people in the US owning a cell phone, it’s a solution that’s available to a large majority of the population.
Offering crisis counseling over text also allows our volunteers to become better counselors. Our full-time Supervisors—staff with master’s degrees or extensive experience in social work and related fields—are able to oversee each conversation as its happening and offer advice to the Crisis Counselors. Volunteers can take on multiple conversations at once, helping us reach more people than through traditional call helplines.
People can connect to our crisis services using SMS text messaging or Facebook Messenger. Texters are triaged using our proprietary machine-learning algorithm lovingly called AVA. Our Crisis Counselors respond to texters through a platform built on Twilio. Our data is displayed using Periscope.
- Artificial Intelligence
- Machine Learning
- Big Data
- Social Networks
With 96% of people having a cell phone in America, we’re able to provide access to equitable quality mental health care to the vast majority of the population. Texters receive the same experience no matter their age, race, gender, sexual identity, income, location, or any other aspect of their lives.
Because people are texting us in a moment of crisis, we’re able to provide an immediate intervention to violence. About 1% of the conversations we have are with imminent risk texters—people who have the ideation, plan, means, and 24-hour time frame for completing suicide, homicide, or another violent act. The majority of the time—about 60%—we’re able to de-escalate the situation and keep the person safe. The other 40% of the time we initiate an active rescue where we work with local first responders to keep the texter safe. We also intervene in cases of child abuse.
- Women & Girls
- Pregnant Women
- LGBTQ+
- Children and Adolescents
- Rural Residents
- Peri-Urban Residents
- Urban Residents
- Very Poor/Poor
- Low-Income
- Middle-Income
- Minorities/Previously Excluded Populations
- Refugees/Internally Displaced Persons
- Persons with Disabilities
- Australia
- Canada
- Ireland {Republic}
- South Africa
- United Kingdom
- United States
- Australia
- Canada
- Ireland {Republic}
- South Africa
- United Kingdom
- United States
To date, we’ve texted with 1.64M people, exchanging 111M messages. In the last year alone, we’ve served 697,000 texters. This year, we’re aiming to serve 1,515,000 texters. We doubling this number each year!
We want to expand to Latin America in the next year and will continue international growth over the next five years.
Looking into the next five years, we face a number of barriers to expanding to second and third world countries. People have to have cell phones or internet access to access our service. We’d need volunteers in the country who understand local dialects and issues who have secure, reliable internet access. We rely on local first responders to keep our imminent texters safe, but this may not be feasible in conflicting countries or areas that aren’t easily accessible. Since we are not meant to be long-term care, we rely on local healthcare and advocacy organizations to provide continued care for our texters. These referrals aren’t available in some countries.
We have an international team who is connecting with local entrepreneurs to understand their regions.
- Nonprofit
83 full-time staff and 3 part-time staff
Nancy Lublin, our Co-Founder and CEO, is a serial social entrepreneur. Crisis Text Line is her third venture. At 23, she founded Dress for Success, which helps women transition from welfare to work in more than 150 cities in 20 countries. She then became the CEO of DoSomething.org, which she grew from zero members to nearly 5 million. She studied politics at Brown University, political theory at Oxford University (as a Marshall Scholar), and has a law degree from NYU. Nancy was named to the Fortune’s “World’s 50 Greatest Leaders” list alongside the Pope and the Dalai Lama.
Bob Filbin, our Co-Founder and Chief Data Scientist, develops new avenues of data collection, storing data in a way that makes it universally accessible, and turning data into action through analysis and storytelling. He’s overseen the creation of the largest dataset on crisis in the country. As of January 2018, Crisis Text Line has a corpus of 60 million messages exchanged by texters and Crisis Counselors. This is growing by over 2 million messages per month. Bob Filbin's expertise falls into two major categories that drive towards turning this data into action: (1) open data collaborations and (2) product development.
We are partnering with about 130 different non-profits, corporations, government agencies, and schools. We give them each a specific keyword to promote within their communities and provide them with aggregated and anonymized data about the mental health issues people in their communities are facing.
Crisis Text Line is free to our texters, but it costs us about $10.60 per texter. These costs cover our Supervision team, Coaches who help Counselors through training, and tech costs to run our services.
We plan to partner with more corporations, non-profits, governments, foundations, and other entities who will make a donation in exchange for access to the anonymized and aggregated data we collect about their communities.
We know how to offer crisis counseling in first-world countries, but we don’t yet know how to help the rest of the world. Being a part of Solve would connect us with the experts we need to think global.
- Technology
- Distribution
- Funding and revenue model
- Talent or board members
- Media and speaking opportunities
Our AVA AI algorithm is a part of Crisis Text Line that makes our solution truly unique. It triages our texter queue by flagging texters as high-risk using words and phrases it’s learned to associate with imminent risk conversations. AVA is how we know that if a person sends us a sad, crying face emoji in their first message, it’s 4x more likely that we will need to trigger an Active Rescue to keep them safe than if they used the word suicide.
The AI Innovations Prize would support our data team in refining AVA even further and find other ways that AI can be used to help our texters.
Our hearts ache over the gun violence we see in America, and we want Crisis Text Line to be part of the downstream solution. Anyone considering an act of gun violence—suicide, homicide, abuse, ect.—can text us. Our Crisis Counselors can de-escalate with them and get local first responders involved if necessary. Victims of gun violence can also text us whenever they’re in a crisis whether they just need someone to talk to or need to be removed from a violent situation. We will use the prize money to continue to provide support to these texters.
The data we collect from our conversations can be used to understand crises. We ensure that our data practices comply with GDPR standards.
Since the beginning of Crisis Text Line, women have been using it the most. About 80% of our users identify as women, which means that on any given day we help about 58,000 women in the US. We would use this prize money to reach even more women in need.
Our AVA AI algorithm is a part of Crisis Text Line that makes our solution truly unique. It triages our texter queue by flagging texters as high-risk using words and phrases it’s learned to associate with imminent risk conversations. AVA is how we know that if a person sends us a sad, crying face emoji in their first message, it’s 4x more likely that we will need to trigger an Active Rescue to keep them safe than if they used the word suicide.
The Innospark Ventures Prize would support our data team in refining AVA even further and find other ways that AI can be used to help our texters.
Women are at the helm of Crisis Text Line. Nancy Lublin, a serial social entrepreneur, has been leading us as Co-Founder and CEO for the past six years. 11 out of the 17 people on our executive team are women. At the same time, about 80% of our texters identify as women.
With the UN Women She Innovates Prize for Gender-Responsive Innovation, we would continue to amplify women’s voices in our leadership and service.
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Co-Founder and Chief Data Scientist
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Business Development Associate