Your front desk does everything right. The welcome email goes out on time, the portal invite is clear, and the login link works exactly the way it should. And still, a surprising share of your new clients never sign in at all.
Here is the part that stings.
The clients who skip the portal are often the ones who need your practice the most. A new psychiatry client fully intends to set up her account, then hits "create password," freezes, and quietly tells herself she will finish registering later, once the day settles down. Later, of course, never quite arrives.
In behavioral health, a missed login is rarely just a missed login. It becomes a first session that never happens, a follow-up that slips through the cracks, and a client who drifts away from care before treatment truly begins.
The channel that was supposed to connect you ends up working like a wall instead.
And it's a strange wall, because your clients are not difficult to reach. They text their friends constantly, along with their dentist, their pharmacy, and their kid's school. The single place they consistently refuse to go is a portal labeled "mental health."
That label carries more weight than most software vendors are willing to admit. Opening a mental health portal in a crowded waiting room, a coffee shop, or in front of a partner can feel genuinely exposing.
A text message, by contrast, feels invisible — identical information delivered through a far more comfortable experience.
So the real question is not whether your clients can communicate. It's whether your current tools ask them to do it in a way that fits their actual lives, or one that quietly filters out the very people you most want to reach, long before they ever sit down with a clinician.
Notenetic's Client Portal works exactly as designed. It's secure, logged, and threaded — everything a clinical system should be.
The problem isn't the portal's security. It's the gap between how the portal works and how your clients actually communicate.
Think about a typical new client. She texts everyone in her life with one thumb.
Then, just to say "running late," the portal asks her to:
Any one of these is minor. Stacked together at a stressful moment, they're enough to make her quietly give up. And behavioral health clients often carry extra weight that makes that stack even heavier.
For someone managing anxiety, depression, or executive function challenges, a few small steps can be the reason a task never gets done. Mental health portal fatigue is real, and it usually shows up as silence.
There's a stigma layer too.
A labeled mental health portal on a home screen, or one that opens in public, can feel like a flag.
A text reveals nothing. To anyone glancing over, it looks like every other thread on the phone.
Then there's the quiet killer:
The one-way reminder. Plenty of systems can send a reminder but can't receive a reply. The client texts back "yes, I'll be there," and the message vanishes into nothing.
We call this the Black Hole Effect. The client tries to engage, hears nothing back, and decides the channel is broken.
Here's why that's so costly. In primary care, a broken channel costs an appointment. In behavioral health, it can cost a client — the very person who needed the session most, reading your silence as a closed door.
Curogram works as an invisible bridge between your practice and your clients. It adds a HIPAA-compliant SMS layer alongside Notenetic, so clients reach you on the channel they already use — without ever seeing a mental-health-labeled login.
Messages go out from your practice's dedicated number to the client's phone. The client just sees a normal text and replies like a normal text.
Behind the scenes, every message is encrypted in transit, logged in an audit-ready dashboard, and protected by SOC 2 Type II controls and a signed Business Associate Agreement. This is real no-app behavioral health communication — nothing to download, nothing to set up.
Substance use treatment carries an extra layer of confidentiality under 42 CFR Part 2, which goes beyond standard HIPAA.
Curogram supports settings that keep diagnostic or treatment-specific details out of the message body. That way, substance use treatment texting stays open as a channel while still honoring the stricter standard.
Every clinician already knows the core idea here: the lower the friction, the more honest the engagement.
A client who can answer in two seconds will tell you she's running late.
A client facing a login often just disappears.
Curogram is built around that truth. It also respects Notenetic client communication preferences — clients who prefer the portal or a phone call can keep using them. Texting is an added channel, never a forced one.
The goal is anxiety-friendly client communication that supports the therapeutic relationship instead of testing it.
When the channel fits the client, the numbers move. Curogram clients run 53% below industry no-show benchmarks. For psychiatry specifically, no-show rates land at 11.03%, compared with a 23% industry average.
Here's what that means in plain terms. Say a psychiatry practice books 200 appointments a month.
A 23% no-show rate is about 46 empty slots.
At 11.03%, that drops to roughly 22 — about 24 sessions a month recovered. That's clients seen, revenue kept, and a schedule that holds together.
The shift behind those numbers is simple. Clients stop saying "I'll log in later," which usually means never. Instead, they use what we call the always-open channel — a thread they can answer anywhere.
In practice, behavioral health client engagement texting looks like this:
None of these moments are dramatic. That's the point. Each one is a small choice to stay engaged, made easier because answering took two seconds.
For your team, that adds up fast. Fewer empty slots, fewer cold no-shows, and fewer clients lost in the gap between intake and first session.
The channel stops being a test the client has to pass and becomes a quiet line that's always open.
The Client Portal works well for clients who log into portals. The trouble is that in behavioral health, those clients are usually in the minority. Most of your caseload lives in their text messages, not in a login screen.
So the fix isn't to push harder on portal adoption. It's to stop asking clients to adapt to your system and to bring your system to them instead.
That's the whole idea behind pairing Notenetic with Curogram. Notenetic holds your clinical record — the secure, structured home for everything you document.
Curogram handles the client's preferred channel — the simple text thread they'll actually answer. Together, they cover the full arc of the relationship, from the very first reminder to the session that follows it.
The difference isn't security. Both meet the same HIPAA standard. The real difference is access. A portal asks the client to come to you, while a text meets them where they already are, on the device in their pocket, with nothing to download and no password to forget.
For people managing anxiety, stigma, or simple overwhelm, that one design choice often decides whether a client engages or disappears. It's the space between a no-show and a session. Between a quiet exit and a relationship that holds.
You don't have to take that on faith. The clearest way to understand it is to see the conversation from your client's side and watch how easy it is for them to receive a message and reply.
Schedule a Demo and we'll show you exactly what that experience looks like, end to end. No long-term contract to sign and no pressure — just a clear view of how your clients would actually communicate with your practice.