US Air Force contracts Healium for ‘drugless’ therapy amid military suicide epidemic
April 27, 2021 | Austin Barnes
As suicide rates among U.S. military service members continue to rise, Columbia-based Healium is doubling down on its mission to make mental fitness tools more accessible.
“It’s an honor to serve these service members and their families who’ve sacrificed in ways we cannot imagine,” Sarah Hill, founder and CEO, told Startland News in announcing a new partnership with the U.S. Air Force.
The deal is expected to deploy Healium’s patented, drugless solution for stress and anxiety directly to service members enduring a mental health experience.
“We get to learn their unique needs for mental wellness and human performance,” Hill continued, highlighting benefits of the Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) Phase 1 contract with the Department of Defense, ways its stakeholders can help better the startup’s product, and doors it could open to future contracts.
“It’s our pleasure to provide them some virtual peace,” Hill said.
According to the Department of Defense, 39 members of the U.S. National Guard were lost to suicide in the fourth quarter of 2020 — compared to 14 deaths in 2019. One hundred fifty-six service members died in total between Oct. 1 and Dec. 31.
Click here to read a full Department of Defense report on the suicide epidemic.
Combined with its SBIR contract, a renewed partnership with Virginia-based advisory and accelerator firm, The Outpost, could help further lower such fatality numbers.
“From pre-deployment to post-deployment, airmen and soldiers are being asked to manage so many difficult and stressful tasks these days,” said Dave Harden, CEO of The Outpost.
“With this comes anxiety, loneliness, depression, and — in the worst situations — suicide,” he continued. “Healium brings a world-class tool and experience that can help to not only teach ourselves to self-regulate actual brain waves, but start to make the synaptic growth required to combat stress and human performance–all with a spa-like virtual experience.”
Click here to learn more about Healium — one of Startland News’ Kansas City Startups to Watch in 2020.
Both partnerships come after a year of intense growth for Healium, which saw sales of its drugless therapy solution increase by 440 percent, Hill said.
“This is the stress olympics — and not everyone has trained for it. We’ve seen a surge in sales not just from the military but schools and enterprises who are returning to work and buying our ‘mental wellness stations,’” she explained of the Healium kit which includes a sanitized virtual reality headset and is designed to live in classrooms, boardrooms, and on kitchen counters.
“These drugless solutions are providing a walk in the park — when you can’t physically take a walk in the park,” Hill emphasized.
“… Whether it’s a large entity like the U.S. Air Force or an athlete looking to improve their human performance, our goal is the same … to make people feel better, sleep better, and learn to self-regulate their brain patterns by unlocking the healing powers inside themselves.”
This story is possible thanks to support from the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, a private, nonpartisan foundation that works together with communities in education and entrepreneurship to create uncommon solutions and empower people to shape their futures and be successful.
For more information, visit www.kauffman.org and connect at www.twitter.com/kauffmanfdn and www.facebook.com/kauffmanfdn

2021 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Events Preview: Innovation Exchange, 1 Billion Bits
There are a plethora of entrepreneurial events hosted in Kansas City on a weekly basis. Whether you’re an entrepreneur, investor, supporter, or curious community member — we recommend these upcoming events for you. Are you hosting an event relevant to Kansas City’s entrepreneurial community? Add it to the FWD/KC calendar for increased exposure. Once your…
Lean Lab leaders dissect recent politics spurring U.S. education engagement
Editor’s note: In partnership with the Wide Ruled podcast hosted by Brainroot Light and Sound, Startland News hopes to offer its audience more avenues to learn about innovators in Kansas City. Opinions expressed in this commentary are the author’s alone. Wide Ruled is a podcast on equality in education. Each episode showcases a struggle or…
Williams to critical Bloomberg piece: KC shouldn’t try to be Silicon Valley
Editor’s note: The following piece is in response to a Bloomberg article critical of the Kansas City Startup Village and Kansas City’s ability to use Google Fiber to become the “next Silicon Valley.” Opinions expressed in this commentary are the author’s alone. In 2012, Kansas City experienced what at the time must have felt like winning…
KC Outpost, local charm lures hundreds of SXSW attendees
Kansas City made a splash at the SXSW Conference thanks to a concerted effort to engage thousands mingling in downtown Austin. Led by the Economic Development Corporation of Kansas City, LaunchKC, the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation and Husch Blackwell, the KC Outpost welcomed hundreds of people curious to learn more about the area. Featuring speakers,…



