Daylight is a life-changing digital therapeutic for anxiety
Lasting recovery from anxiety that’s available anytime, anywhere.

In a peer-reviewed clinical trial, patients experienced lasting recovery from anxiety
71%
achieved clinical improvement in anxiety.1
57%
reported improvement in overall mood.1
47%
experienced improvement in insomnia.1
Daylight is continually and rigorously studied for effectiveness in gold-standard clinical trials.

Daylight has been shown to lower health care costs by $1,836 per individual*
A cost analysis of Daylight vs. other leading anxiety interventions revealed Daylight to be more cost effective.
*Paper pending publication2
Daylight delivers meaningful, lasting results
Daylight is a clinically proven digital therapeutic that helps people gain control over their anxiety. After a two-minute quiz to discover their Anxiety Type, individuals receive personalized techniques to help manage it.

Personalized therapeutic content
Daylight adjusts evidence-based techniques and offers additional guidance based on an individual’s needs.

Help at any time, day or night
When it’s needed the most, Daylight is instantly accessible and ready to check in, practice, or try a new technique.

Meaningful behavior change
80% of people who use Daylight say they’ve practiced the techniques in their day-to-day lives.
Most anxiety sufferers aren’t getting the help they need
Twenty percent of adults experience clinically significant worry and anxiety each year.3 The implications are far-reaching for their physical health and health care costs — individuals with anxiety are 3-5x more likely to visit the doctor, and 6x more likely to be hospitalized.4,5 Despite the high prevalence of anxiety, many who need help don’t receive it.
1. Carl, J. R., Miller, C. B., Henry, A. L., Davis, M. L., Stott, R., Smits, J. A., … & Espie, C. A. (2020). Efficacy of digital cognitive behavioral therapy for moderate‐to‐severe symptoms of generalized anxiety disorder: A randomized controlled trial. Depression and Anxiety, 37(12), 1168-1178.
2. Darden, M., Davis, M. L., Jenna, J. R., Smits, J. A., Otto, W. M., Miller, C. B. (2021). Cost-effectiveness of automated digital CBT (Daylight) for Generalized Anxiety Disorder: A Markov simulation model in the United States. Under review.
3. Anxiety Disorders | NAMI: National Alliance on Mental Illness. (2017). National Alliance on Mental Illness. https://www.nami.org/About-Mental-Illness/Mental-Health-Conditions/Anxiety-Disorders.
4. Harman, J. S., Rollman, B. L., Hanusa, B. H., Lenze, E. J., & Shear, M. K. (2002). Physician office visits of adults for anxiety disorders in the United States, 1985–1998. Journal of General Internal Medicine, 17(3), 165-172.
5. Facts & Statistics | Anxiety and Depression Association of America, ADAA. (2021). Anxiety & Depression Association of America. https://adaa.org/understanding-anxiety/facts-statistics.