Definition
AI and mental health refers to using software chatbots and apps that mimic conversation to offer emotional support, coping exercises, and wellness coaching, usually as a low-cost supplement to, not a replacement for, human care.
At a glance
- Always-on and cheap: chatbots like Wysa and Woebot deliver 24/7 support and CBT-style exercises at a fraction of a therapist’s cost.[1]
- Not a doctor: the FDA has cleared 1,200+ AI medical devices but none to treat mental illness; Wysa and Woebot hold only Breakthrough designations.[2]
- Real safety gaps: a 2025 Stanford study found chatbots responded inappropriately to suicidal-ideation prompts ~20% of the time, versus ~7% for human therapists.[4]
- Privacy is the catch for employers: wellness apps infer mood and stress, and HIPAA plus new state AI laws (e.g., California) shape what you can offer staff.[3]
Why a business owner should care
Mental-health apps are a fast-growing perk, with the chatbot market near $2.1B in 2025. They can widen access and cut wait times for stressed staff. But employees often distrust company-sponsored tools, fearing disclosures hurt their careers, so confidentiality and clear, separate vendor data handling are essential to adoption.[3]
Where it works and where it doesn’t
Evidence shows modest benefit for mild-to-moderate stress, low-risk users, and routine coaching, though many trials are short and company-funded.[1] Avoid relying on AI for crisis, suicide risk, or serious conditions.[4] Treat it as a triage and self-help layer overseen by, and pointing toward, real clinicians and your EAP.
Bottom line
AI mental health tools are a useful, affordable first layer of support for everyday stress, not a substitute for licensed care, so choose vetted vendors, protect employee privacy, and always route crises to humans.