When employers evaluate virtual care, the first question is often about cost.
And that’s fair — reducing healthcare spend matters, but focusing on cost alone only tells part of the story. The highest-performing virtual care models don’t just reduce spending; They improve how care is delivered, experienced, and sustained over time.
That’s where the real value begins.
One of the most immediate impacts of virtual care is operational.
When employees have faster access to care, pressure is relieved across the system:
This doesn’t just improve access. It improves efficiency — freeing up capacity and reducing administrative burden.
At First Stop Health, fast access and $0 cost remove common barriers that delay care, helping employees engage earlier and more consistently.
That consistency reduces the strain on higher-cost, higher-complexity care settings.
Operational improvements are important, but clinical outcomes are where ROI becomes tangible.
When employees stay engaged in care, providers can intervene earlier, adjust treatment plans, and prevent conditions from escalating. That leads to fewer complications, reduced readmissions, and improved quality of care.
At First Stop Health, this model drives measurable results — including 80% of patients lowering blood pressure and stabilizing glucose after five visits.
That same approach extends to high-cost areas like weight and metabolic health. Rather than treating GLP-1s as a standalone solution, prescribing is embedded within primary care — supported by coaching, nutrition, and ongoing clinical oversight. This ensures patients stay engaged, progress is monitored, and care plans are adjusted over time. And First Stop Health patients even lost 19% of their body weight, on average.
These aren’t just health improvements. They’re what makes outcomes sustainable and costs more predictable.
Patient and provider experience are often overlooked in ROI discussions. But they play a critical role in whether care is actually used. If care is difficult to access, confusing to navigate, or disconnected across providers, employees disengage.
And when engagement drops, outcomes — and ROI — follow.
High-performing models create a simpler experience:
The strongest virtual care programs create long-term strategic value.
That includes:
This is where many solutions fall short. They offer access, but not alignment with long-term outcomes. A connected care model closes that gap — linking day-to-day care decisions with broader organizational goals.
Many virtual care solutions focus on one part of the equation — access, navigation, or point-in-time care. First Stop Health is built differently.
We turn activity to impact with a virtual care model connects:
Because care is integrated across primary care, mental health, and urgent care, each interaction builds the last — creating continuity instead of fragmentation.
ROI in virtual care isn’t defined by a single metric. It’s the result of a system that works operationally, clinically, and experientially. Cost savings are the outcome, not the strategy.
See how a connected virtual care model delivers measurable ROI across your entire system.
Virtual care ROI is measured through more than cost savings alone. High-performing models improve operational efficiency, clinical outcomes, employee engagement, and long-term healthcare utilization — all of which contribute to overall value.
When employees stay engaged in care, providers can intervene earlier, adjust treatment plans, and help prevent conditions from escalating. Connected care models improve chronic condition management, reduce complications, and support more sustainable health outcomes over time.
In a connected virtual care model, GLP-1 prescribing is embedded within primary care and supported by coaching, nutrition guidance, and ongoing clinical oversight. This creates greater accountability, improves engagement, and helps employers manage long-term metabolic health costs more effectively.
High-performing virtual care models combine fast access, integrated care coordination, ongoing provider relationships, and measurable outcomes. The strongest models improve not only access to care, but also how care is experienced, guided, and sustained over time.