In the United States, millions grapple with substance use disorders (SUD) and mental health (MH) challenges, yet accessing timely, quality care remains a daunting hurdle.
Over the past decade, SAMHSA’s database has shrunk by 15.7 percent, even as the need for care grows. For those seeking opioid treatment, the site lacks filters for medication types or payment options such as Medicaid, making it harder to find tailored care. These gaps leave vulnerable people—veterans, pregnant women, and low-income families—without access to critical resources.
Why does this matter? Because how people search for care has changed. Today, 88 percent of Americans use search engines to find treatment, with more than 60 percent doing so on mobile devices. They prioritize insurance acceptance (91 percent), speed to care (33 percent book within two days), and in-network providers (90 percent). They want fast, anonymous, mobile-first experiences, with photos and star reviews guiding their choices.
Yet FindTreatment.gov feels like a relic: Its user interface is clunky, its filters are confusing, and key data points like costs, hours, and availability are absent. There are no analytics, and no call tracking, to measure its impact, and facility websites are rarely linked. In an era of Amazon and Zocdoc, where streamlined experiences are the norm, this is unacceptable.
The human cost of these shortcomings is profound. Imagine a veteran in Texas searching for SUD care, only to find outdated Veterans Affairs facility listings or no detox options. Or a pregnant woman in California seeking perinatal SUD treatment, unaware that roughly two-thirds of Medicaid-accepting facilities are missing from the database. These aren’t just numbers—they’re people in crisis, left to navigate a broken system when time is of the essence.
So, how do we fix FindTreatment.gov? First, prioritize data quality. SAMHSA must implement rigorous validation to ensure accurate, comprehensive listings. This means expanding the database to include missing facilities, especially for underserved groups like veterans and perinatal patients. Second, modernize the platform with a mobile app and optimized mobile experience, reflecting how most users search. Third, revamp the user experience by simplifying filter logic, adding transparent details on costs, hours, and availability, and integrating analytics to track performance. For opioid treatment, include filters for medication types and payment options, plus hyperlinks to facility websites.
Finally, take cues from commercial platforms like Zocdoc, which offers streamlined booking and clear in-network labels, or Amazon, with its imagery, ratings, and rapid fulfillment. Adding photos, reviews, and one-click booking could transform FindTreatment.gov into a tool that empowers patients, not frustrates them.
The United States has the resources and expertise to make FindTreatment.gov a model for accessible behavioral health care. By investing in data accuracy, mobile optimization, and user-friendly design, we can ensure that those in crisis find the care they need, when they need it. In a nation where mental health and substance use challenges touch nearly every community, fixing this tool isn’t just a policy priority—it’s a moral imperative.







