50+ Clinical Tools
Measurement-Based Care Defined, evidenced, automated.

Measurement-based care (MBC) is the clinical practice of routinely collecting validated patient-reported outcomes and using those scores to guide treatment decisions session by session.

HIPAA Compliant
250K+ Assessments
Sarah Mitchell
Depression Trajectory
Clinical Improvement
Current Score
7 / 27
Mild Severity
Reduction
-62%
Vs. Baseline
PHQ-9 Depression
2 mins ago
GAD-7 Anxiety
2 mins ago

What is measurement-based care?

At its core, measurement-based care (MBC) is the routine use of validated, patient-reported scales such as the PHQ-9 (depression), GAD-7 (anxiety), and PCL-5 (trauma) to track symptoms, function, and treatment response over time. Scores are reviewed with the patient and used to inform clinical decisions at every session, not just at intake or discharge.

01

Select

Choose validated, psychometrically sound tools matched to your patient population and presenting concerns. Tool selection should balance clinical coverage with brevity. Tools that take more than 3–5 minutes to complete see lower completion rates.

02

Collect

Administer assessments at regular intervals: ideally at every session, or at minimum every 2–4 weeks during active treatment. Collection should happen before the session begins, so scores are available to review in the room. Digital administration substantially increases compliance vs. paper.

03

Share

Review scores with the patient during the session. This is the step most commonly skipped, and most consistently linked to improved outcomes in the research. When patients see their own longitudinal data, therapeutic alliance strengthens and they become active participants in tracking their own progress.

04

Act

Use score trends to make explicit treatment decisions. A patient whose depression scores have not improved after 6 sessions triggers a clinical conversation: adjust the approach, consult, or step up to a higher level of care. Acting on the data, not just collecting it, is what separates MBC from routine outcomes monitoring.

Standard MBC tools

PHQ-9
Depression severity
9 items
~2 min
GAD-7
Generalized anxiety
7 items
~2 min
PCL-5
PTSD symptoms (DSM-5-TR)
20 items
~5 min
C-SSRS
Suicidality (ideation + behavior)
6 items
~3 min
AUDIT
Alcohol use disorder
10 items
~3 min
DAST-10
Drug use severity
10 items
~3 min
PHQ-2
Depression rapid screen
2 items
~1 min
View full library

Clinical pro tip

"The effect size of MBC is largest for patients predicted to have a poor outcome. Reviewing scores with the patient, not just collecting them, is the step most consistently linked to improvement in the literature."

The clinical evidence

MBC is not just a workflow improvement. Decades of research show meaningful gains in remission, symptom reduction, and patient retention.

Zhu et al. (2021) pooled 7 randomized controlled trials covering 2,019 adults with depression and reported 83% higher odds of remission with MBC versus treatment as usual.

83%
Higher remission odds

(2021). Journal of Clinical Psychiatry, . https://doi.org/10.4088/JCP.21r14034

2.5x
Faster symptom reduction

(2015). Cognitive and Behavioral Practice, . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cbpra.2014.01.010

40%
Better retention

(2018). Psychotherapy (Chic), . https://doi.org/10.1037/pst0000167

Adaptive Logic Protocol

LOGIC_TRANSPARENCY: HIGH
AUTO_SCORING: ACTIVE
STEP_01
Broad Screener
Powered by HiQō
  • Mood Symptoms
  • Anxiety Signals
  • Substance Use
LOGIC_ENGINE
IFMood > 2ADDPHQ-9
IFAnxiety == TADDGAD-7
IFTrauma_IndADDPCL-5
STEP_03
Clinical Battery
PHQ-9_ASSN
GAD-7_ASSN
ASRS_SKIP

PROTOCOL_v8.4 // CONFIG_SYNCED // 48H_WINDOW

Automation logic

How HiBoop automates the entire MBC workflow

Most clinicians want to use measurement-based care, but the workflow burden of paper scales, manual scoring, and chart entry makes it impractical to manage consistently. HiBoop removes the manual steps so clinicians can focus on the clinical conversation.

Zero-touch delivery

Automated schedules ensure every patient receives the right scale at the right time, e.g. PHQ-9 weekly during active depression treatment, PCL-5 every 4 weeks for trauma. Reminders go out by SMS or email before each session, with no manual sending and no clinician overhead.

Real-time scoring and alerts

Stop manual tallying. Results are scored automatically against DSM-5 thresholds and surfaced in your dashboard with risk flags, threshold crossings (e.g., PHQ-9 ≥10 = moderate depression), and reliable change indicators ready for the session.

Longitudinal trend analysis

Visualize patient trajectories to see what is working and what is not. Symptom trends, threshold crossings, and response patterns appear in a single longitudinal chart so you can act on the data, not just collect it.

Why HiBoop

Built for MBC. Not bolted on.

General EHRs treat outcome measures as static forms. HiBoop is a clinical intelligence layer built entirely around the MBC workflow, with branching logic, score interpretation against DSM-5/ICD-11 thresholds, and longitudinal tracking baked in from the schema up.

Capability
HiBoop
Platform
Paper / PDFGeneric EHR
Automated delivery (SMS / email)
Real-time scoring + clinical alerts
Longitudinal outcome tracking
Limited
Between-session patient monitoring
50+ validated tools
Limited
CPT 96127 billing documentation
No EHR connection required
48-hour go-live
Purpose-built for MBC workflows

EHR column reflects typical capabilities; varies by platform. HiBoop works alongside most EHRs via export, no integration required to go live.

Frequently asked questions

Clinical definitions, evidence questions, and HiBoop-specific answers, all in one place.

What is measurement-based care?

Measurement-based care (MBC) is a clinical approach in behavioral health that uses patient-reported, standardized tools to regularly track symptoms and progress. Data is collected before or during sessions and used explicitly to inform treatment adjustments, improve patient-clinician communication, and enhance outcomes. Think of it like tracking blood pressure in physical health. MBC applies the same principle to mental health: routine monitoring enables earlier intervention and more personalized care.

What is an example of measurement-based care?

A patient starts treatment for depression. At intake, they complete the PHQ-9 and score 18 (Moderately Severe). The clinician reviews this score together with the patient and sets a target of below 10 by session 8. The patient completes the PHQ-9 before every session. By session 4, the score is 14; by session 6, it's 12; at session 8, it's 9. The target is met. If the score had held at 17 after session 6, that data would prompt a clinical review: consider medication consultation, change modality, or adjust treatment goals. Every decision is anchored to objective data rather than impressions alone.

What are the four core components of measurement-based care?

The four core components are: (1) Select: choose validated tools matched to your patient population; (2) Collect: administer those tools at regular intervals, typically before each session; (3) Share: review scores with the patient in real time to inform the therapeutic relationship; and (4) Act: use score trends to make explicit clinical decisions, such as adjusting treatment intensity, changing modality, or referring for higher-level care.

What is the clinical evidence for measurement-based care?

Substantial and consistent. Lambert et al. (2018), a meta-analysis of 24 outcome-monitoring trials, found ROM-assisted treatment superior to care as usual in two-thirds of studies. Zhu et al. (2021) pooled 7 depression RCTs (N=2,019) and reported 83% higher odds of remission with MBC. APA, NCQA, SAMHSA, NICE, and the AIMS Center identify MBC as an evidence-based standard of care. Full evidence summary.

What is the difference between measurement-based care and value-based care?

MBC is a clinical practice. It refers to how care is delivered within sessions, using outcome data to guide treatment decisions. Value-based care is a payment and policy model. It ties reimbursement to patient outcomes and quality metrics rather than volume of services. MBC is the clinical mechanism that makes value-based care possible: you cannot demonstrate value without measuring outcomes.

Is MBC billable?

Yes. Brief emotional and behavioral assessments administered as part of an MBC protocol are reimbursable under CPT 96127. HiBoop generates the structured documentation (assessment name, date, score, and clinical interpretation) required to support accurate billing for each administered measure.

Do we need to replace our EHR to use HiBoop?

No. HiBoop works alongside your existing EHR. It's not a replacement. Most practices run HiBoop for outcome measurement and patient-reported data collection, and keep their EHR for clinical notes and billing. There's no EHR connection required to go live.

How long does implementation take?

48 hours from discovery call to your first automated assessment. We configure your assessment battery, set up delivery schedules, and replicate your existing intake workflow digitally. Your clinical team gets a 15-minute training session. Most practices send their first automated outcome measure in the same week they start.

What is the difference between… · Is MBC billable · Do we need to replace… · How long does implementation take