Over the past decade, insurance providers and self-insured health systems in the United States have increasingly moved toward value-based-care models that tie a portion of reimbursement to patient outcomes. This has fueled advances across fields from primary care to management of diabetes and cardiac conditions. Mental health care has been slow to make this shift, sticking with fee-for-service schemes that reward utilization: The more sessions a patient has, the more the provider makes, regardless of whether the patient improves. This system creates a disincentive for therapists to pursue the most rapid and effective treatment for their patients.