The connective tissue between primary care, schools, and psychiatry - turning scattered mental health data into action.
FIG. 1 - The mark that now sits inside state psychiatry access programs from Texas to Vermont. A small logo doing quietly enormous work.
A family doctor in a county with no child psychiatrist for a hundred miles types a few notes about a worried teenager. Within hours, a specialist reviews the case, suggests a plan, and the whole exchange is logged, measured, and folded into a statewide picture of how kids are actually doing. No referral lost in a fax machine. No six-month waitlist. That quiet handoff runs on Trayt Health.
Mental health care in America is famously fragmented - a relay race where the baton keeps hitting the floor. Trayt's bet is unglamorous and exactly right: the problem isn't a shortage of compassion, it's a shortage of connection. So the company built the plumbing. Not an app that replaces clinicians, but the software that lets the ones we have reach a lot more people, and prove it worked.
Trayt describes itself as patient-centric and clinician-directed, which is a tidy way of saying two things at once: the patient is the unit of truth, and the doctor stays in the driver's seat. The platform integrates behavioral, medical, and environmental factors - including social determinants and childhood trauma - so a teenager's anxiety isn't read in a vacuum. It is organized into four modules, each solving a different break in the chain.
Bakes behavioral health into primary care. A PCP connects with a specialist, and every consultation is captured as structured data instead of a forgotten phone call.
A patient app that runs measurement-based care between visits - standardized screeners plus daily journals, so clinicians aren't flying blind for ninety days at a stretch.
Validates program quality and utilization, tracking outcomes down to HEDIS measures. The part that turns "we think it's working" into "here's the receipt."
Rolls granular patient data up into population trends, risk models, and sharper diagnoses. One screen, 750+ symptoms and factors, statewide signal.
A healthtech veteran with 25+ years in digital health services - strategy, fundraising, and the unsexy operational grind of getting software adopted inside government programs. She started Trayt in 2013 after watching the same systemic gaps swallow patients again and again.
A clinical professor of psychiatry and former Director of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry at Stanford. He supplies the clinical credibility that keeps the product honest - the reason states trust Trayt with their hardest cases.
The clever move is the customer. Instead of grinding through hospital procurement one logo at a time, Trayt plugs into psychiatry access programs - the statewide lines that let any primary care doctor phone a friend in psychiatry. Win one of those and you reach thousands of providers and millions of lives in a single contract. Texas was first. Arizona, Ohio, Kentucky, West Virginia, and Vermont followed.
Trayt's 2026 round of $7.17M - venture, round unspecified - followed a $7.46M Series A in 2022 backed by DigitalDx Ventures and Vajra Investments. Early backers include Plug and Play, the Texas Medical Center accelerator, and MedTech Innovator. The capital does one thing: buy more state contracts.
Raises $7.17M to push the integrated care platform into more states.
Expands pediatric and perinatal mental health access across Arizona via the Arizona Psychiatry Access Line.
Platform reported supporting 20 pediatric, perinatal, and substance use disorder programs across 8 states.
Kentucky's KyCOMPASS and Ohio's psychiatric access program go digital on Trayt; brand refreshed with agency Takt.
The patient-facing app has a name with a pun built in: MyndMap.
All 15 Arizona counties Trayt serves are designated mental health professional shortage areas.
The platform watches more than 750 distinct symptoms and factors - including childhood trauma.
Co-founder Dr. Feinstein ran child and adolescent psychiatry at Stanford before helping build the software.
The teenager in rural Arizona never sees the software. Neither does the mother who finally gets a maternal mental health screen in Kentucky, or the kid flagged early by a school counselor in Texas. That's the point. The best infrastructure is invisible - you notice it only when it's missing, and for years in mental health, it was always missing.
Trayt Health didn't set out to be the loudest name in behavioral health. It set out to be the wiring behind the wall - the thing that quietly makes the right treatment reach the right person at the right time. Eight states in, the wall is getting bigger. The teenager still won't know its name. The doctor who helped her will.