How The Soldiers Project automates veteran intake, clinician matching, and confidential care coordination
The Soldiers Project is a nonprofit providing free, confidential mental health services to post-9/11 veterans, active-duty service members, and their families through a national network of volunteer licensed clinicians. Behind every client engaged sits a workflow stack that takes a private request for help and turns it into a matched clinician relationship the client can actually use.
Veteran mental health is a service where every operational step is also a clinical one. The first call has to feel safe. The clinician match has to fit. Scheduling has to respect a client who may be working through stigma to be there at all. Volunteer clinicians have to be supported so they keep showing up. The Soldiers Project automates that pipeline so a service member, a partner, or a parent can ask for help and get matched to a clinician who fits — without the workflow getting in the way of the care.
The four pain points The Soldiers Project's automation has to solve
Intake has to feel safe, not bureaucratic. A veteran calling for help is taking a step that may have taken years. A form-heavy, transactional intake at the wrong moment loses the client before the first session.
Clinician matching is multi-factor and personal. Branch of service, era, combat experience, family role, language, location, specialisation, availability. A good match makes therapy possible; a bad match ends it.
Volunteer clinician networks need real support. Licensed clinicians donating time still need supervision, peer consultation, secure tooling, and continuing education. Without that support, the network thins.
Outcomes have to be tracked confidentially. Funders, boards, and the field need to know the programme works. Clients need their care to stay confidential. Both have to be true at the same time.
Four automation patterns that keep The Soldiers Project moving
Trauma-informed intake
First contact is designed to feel like a person, not a form. Identifying details are collected only when needed; the client moves toward a match at their own pace.
Multi-factor clinician matching
Matching weighs branch, era, combat experience, family role, language, location, specialisation, and availability. Clients reach a clinician who fits, not just the next one in the queue.
Volunteer-clinician support layer
Volunteer clinicians get supervision, peer consultation, secure tooling, and CE-aligned training. The network stays well; the network stays available.
Confidential outcome tracking
Standardised outcome measures are collected confidentially with client consent. Funders see the programme works; clients see their privacy respected.
The four-stage pipeline
Every client at The Soldiers Project runs through the same four-stage shape — trauma-informed intake, multi-factor clinician match, ongoing engagement, confidential outcome tracking. The same pipeline serves a service member calling for the first time and a partner reaching out on their family's behalf.
Case study: The Soldiers Project
The Soldiers Project
Challenge
Provide free, confidential mental health care to post-9/11 veterans, active-duty service members, and their families through a volunteer clinician network — keeping intake safe, matching personal, clinicians supported, and outcomes trackable without compromising client confidentiality.
Solution
The Soldiers Project built a care pipeline where intake is trauma-informed, clinician matching is multi-factor, the volunteer network is actively supported, and outcomes are tracked confidentially. Clients reach the right clinician; clinicians stay in the network; the programme can show it works.
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How does The Soldiers Project make first contact feel safe?
First contact is designed to feel like a person, not a form. The conversation collects only what is needed to move toward a clinician match, at the pace the client is comfortable with — so the workflow does not become a barrier to seeking help.
How does The Soldiers Project match a client to a clinician?
Matching weighs branch of service, era, combat experience, family role, language, location, specialisation, and availability. Clients reach a clinician who fits their situation, not whoever happens to be next in the queue.
How does The Soldiers Project measure outcomes without compromising confidentiality?
Standardised outcome measures are collected confidentially with client consent. Funders and the field see that the programme works in aggregate, while every individual client's care stays private.
Run your care programme the same way
Byteflow gives you the workflow shape — intake, match, engage, track — so the people who need care reach the right clinician and your network stays supported.
Start automating →Easy automation. For everyone.