"We need students, housewives, clinicians, immigrants, and seniors at the table."
Those are the words of Caitlyn Wang, chief Joymaker at curaJOY, a Las Vegas-based nonprofit that's developed an AI-powered "family wellness" platform that it says is designed "to make social and mental health support services globally accessible," per a press release.
MyCuraJOY, which curaJOY says it launched in June, combines "real-time, context-aware behavioral coaching, time-consuming psychoeducational evaluation processes, carries out diagnostics and monitoring, provides skill-building programs, and more," per the press release.
It also uses what curaJOY says are "predictive analysis of AI technology to deliver on-demand, personalized, and field-tested social and mental health support."
What curaJOY says it offers: "real-time, context-aware behavioral coaching, time-consuming psychoeducational evaluation processes, carries out diagnostics and monitoring, provides skill-building programs, and more."
What curaJOY isn't offering: any actual mental health or behavioral health services.
"We need students, housewives, clinicians, immigrants, and seniors at the table," says Caitlyn Wang
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