Earnings Call Transcript
Teladoc Health, Inc. (TDOC)
Earnings Call Transcript - TDOC Q4 2021
Patrick Feeley, Head of Investor Relations
Thank you and good afternoon. Today after the market closed, we issued a press release announcing our third quarter 2021 financial results. This press release and the accompanying slide presentation are available in the Investor Relations section of the teladochealth.com website. On this call to discuss the results are Jason Gorevic, our Chief Executive Officer, and Molla Murphy, our Chief Financial Officer. During this call, we will also provide our fourth-quarter and full-year 2021 outlook and our prepared remarks will be followed by a question-and-answer session. Please note that we'll be discussing certain non-GAAP financial measures that we believe are important in evaluating Teladoc Health's performance. Details on the relationship between these non-GAAP measures to the most comparable GAAP measures and reconciliations thereof can be found in the press release that is posted on our website. Also, please note that certain statements made during this call will be forward-looking statements as defined by the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Such forward-looking statements are subject to risks, uncertainties, and other factors that could cause the actual results for Teladoc Health to differ materially from those expressed or implied on this call. For additional information, please refer to our cautionary statement and the press release and our filings with the SEC. All of which are available on our website. I would now like to turn the call over to Jason.
Jason Gorevic, CEO
Good afternoon. And thank you for joining us. This afternoon, I'm pleased to report another strong quarter marked by solid financial performance, more care delivered, and deeper member relationships. Today, I also want to highlight two areas where we've made meaningful high-impact progress toward our goal of transforming healthcare. One, becoming the consumer destination of choice for virtual care. And two, gaining significant commercial traction for our integrated Whole-person primary care approach. Consumers and clients are demanding a single integrated virtual healthcare solution that seamlessly takes care of all of their healthcare needs, redefines the care experience, and leverages data to improve care at scale. During the third quarter, we continued to demonstrate our unique ability to meet those demands with the Whole-person care approach that continues to fuel our sustained growth. Our broad portfolio of capabilities drove excellent financial results, producing revenue of $522 million in the third quarter. An increase of 81% over the prior year, including organic revenue growth of 32%, which excludes revenue from acquisitions completed over the past 12 months. With our third quarter results and increased visibility to fourth quarter revenue, we're updating our full-year revenue guidance range to $2.15 to $2.25 billion, representing growth of 85% over the prior year. While these financial results quantify our ability to deliver on our promises and sustain the success of our work to transform healthcare, validation came in a number of forms. And we're very proud that Teladoc Health has once again been named number one in consumer satisfaction by J.D. Power. We've always viewed our outstanding consumer experience as a key differentiator for us. But it is also one of the unique ways in which we expand our role in an individual's healthcare journey. For example, we find that the Net Promoter Score for someone's first visit is a strong leading indicator of future usage, and a positive initial experience creates stickier relationships with our members. The recognition by J.D. Power is proof positive that we're delivering on our promise to our members. And the strong utilization increases, in spite of the waning pandemic, are the results. Our global network of clinicians provided 3.9 million visits in the quarter, an increase of 37% over the third quarter of last year. Even as pandemic restrictions continue to ease and vaccination rates improve, consumers are increasingly relying on Teladoc Health virtual care. We're now on track to provide more than 14 million visits for the year. As has been the case all year, the strength in utilization has been driven by growth in visits related to noninfectious diseases and specialty care as consumers are turning to us for a broader array of conditions. During the third quarter, more than 75% of member visits in the employer and health plan channel were related to noninfectious diseases versus approximately 50% in the pre-pandemic period. Growth in mental health visits in particular continued to outperform across the direct-to-consumer, employer, and health plan populations. And B2B mental health visits remain on pace to double this year compared to fiscal year 2020. While we continue to see lower than typical transmission of infectious diseases across the country due to social distancing and PPE usage, our infectious disease volumes have continued to increase throughout the year. The combination of building momentum in infectious diseases and continued strength in noninfectious diseases and mental health volumes gives us great confidence in our outlook for 2021. We have also made substantial commercial progress with our Primary360 products, which represent a key pillar of our Whole-person care strategy. Primary360 re-imagines primary care by delivering a fully integrated virtual solution for mental and physical health. Leveraging technology and data, we bring together a full care team for the consumer, connecting into the physical delivery system to get consumers the right care at the right time. Over the last few months, we've signed several new agreements for Primary360, including two notable health plan deals. First, as announced earlier in the quarter by CVS, we signed an agreement to bring Primary360 to Aetna's self-insured employers nationwide beginning next year. Earlier this month, we also expanded our relationship with Centene to partner on its new and better virtual-first health plans on the healthcare exchanges, beginning with four states in 2022. Each of these agreements provides members with access to our virtual care team, including a virtual primary care physician of their choosing and care extenders such as nurses, zero co-pays for virtual visits, unlimited messaging, integration with our virtual specialties such as dermatology and mental health, and navigation to local in-network providers when needed. We expect these partnerships, along with deals signed across our suite of Whole-person solutions with HCSC and other blues plans over the past several months, to contribute meaningfully to growth over the next few years as we drive adoption of our Whole-person virtual care solutions. Another key on-ramp to our full set of products and capabilities is Teladoc's integrated suite of Chronic Care Solutions. The number of individuals enrolled in our suite of Chronic Care Solutions grew 31% year-over-year to 725,000 at the end of the quarter. In the third quarter, we continued to drive growth in multi-program enrollment. 24% of our chronic care members are now enrolled in more than one program, up from 8% in the third quarter of last year. The growth in chronic care enrollment combined with the greater number of individuals enrolled in multiple programs, such as members enrolled in both our diabetes and hypertension programs, resulted in a 45% year-over-year increase in the total number of chronic care programs in which our members are enrolled. Before I pass off the call to Molla, I want to provide some initial perspective on our expectations for 2022. As you know, it's not our typical practice to comment on forward outlook at this point in the year. But we believe the additional color is appropriate given our insights at this stage of the selling season and our outlook on consolidated revenue growth for next year. First, we are as confident as ever in our multiple levers for growth in 2022 and beyond. Our unique ability to deliver longitudinal Whole-person care is a significant competitive advantage. And our leading position in all B2B and DTC channels enables us to fuel continued growth. Given our insights at this stage of the selling season, our preliminary outlook for consolidated revenue next year is approximately $2.6 billion. We plan to provide additional details around the building blocks to that outlook at our Investor Day in three weeks. Chronic care is just one of those levers for growth and is increasingly converging with others. For example, through the integration of our capabilities into new high-value products like Primary360 and myStrength Complete. So far this year, Chronic Care has grown in line with our initial expectations. However, as we work through the 2022 planning process, we expect to be more conservative about growth expectations for standalone Chronic Care. Our preliminary outlook assumes standalone Chronic Care revenue will grow approximately 25% to 35%. We believe strongly that our Chronic Care capabilities will also continue to unlock growth across our integrated suite of products and solutions. Our Whole-person care approach is clearly resonating with clients and consumers as their expectations for virtual healthcare delivery continue to move up the value chain and expand from transactional episodic demand toward integrated longitudinal care. As the only virtual care provider capable of delivering the full care continuum at scale, the breadth and depth of our solutions uniquely position us to meet the market's evolving expectations, demonstrating why our clients are turning to Teladoc Health to satisfy a wider set of consumer healthcare needs. We hope this insight provides helpful context and we look forward to sharing more at our Investor Day on November 18, where we plan to provide an update on our progress toward creating the integrated virtual front door to Whole-person care, as well as detail on our long-term growth outlook. With that, I will turn the call over to Molla for a review of the third quarter, as well as detailed guidance.
Mala Murthy, CFO
Thank you, Jason, and good afternoon, everyone. During the third quarter, total revenue increased 81% to $522 million, or 32% excluding acquired revenue. Total U.S. revenue for the quarter was $483 million, representing growth of 89% over the prior year's quarter. Total international revenue of $39 million increased 17% over the prior year. Access fee revenue for the third quarter increased 99% year-over-year to $452 million and represented 87% of total revenue, up from 78% in the prior year's quarter. The increase in access fee revenue as a percentage of total revenue is primarily due to the acquisition of Livongo and growth in direct-to-consumer mental health, which is sold on a subscription basis. Visit fee revenue for the third quarter of $60 million increased 18% year-over-year. Turning to membership and access. We ended the quarter with U.S. paid membership of 52.5 million members, an increase of 500,000 members sequentially over the prior quarter. Individuals with visit fee-only access totaled 23.6 million at the end of the third quarter. Total unique members enrolled in one or more of our chronic care programs was 725,000 members as of the third quarter, a 31% increase over the 553,000 unique members as of the prior year's quarter, pro forma for the merger with Livongo, and an increase of 16,000 members sequentially, which was in line with our expectations. Average revenue per member per month was $2.57 in the third quarter, up from $1.18 in the prior year's quarter and $2.47 in the second quarter of 2021. The primary driver of the sequential increase in revenue per member was growth in direct-to-consumer mental health revenue. Now turning to visits. During the third quarter, we provided 3.9 million visits through our network of clinicians, representing 37% growth over the prior year's quarter. We saw strong growth in both direct-to-consumer visits and visits through our enterprise relationships with health plans and employers on a year-over-year and sequential basis. Platform enabled sessions, which represent encounters facilitated by our license platform and provided by our clients’ own clinicians, were an additional 1 million in the quarter. The annualized utilization rate for our members was 23.7% in the third quarter, a 720-basis point increase over the prior year's quarter, and a 210-basis point increase sequentially. Adjusted gross profit, which excludes depreciation and amortization of intangibles, increased to $353 million. Adjusted gross margin was 67.6% compared to 63.7% in the third quarter of 2020. The 390-basis point improvement in adjusted gross margin is primarily attributable to the increased mix of subscription fee revenue versus the prior year. Gross profit and adjusted gross profit in the third quarter of 2021 include the benefit of approximately $5.7 million in lower expenses on Livongo devices, attributable to purchase accounting adjustments related to the merger. Adjusted EBITDA was $67.4 million in the third quarter compared to $39.5 million in the prior year's quarter. Adjusted EBITDA in the third quarter of 2021 includes a benefit of approximately $5.7 million attributable to those purchase accounting adjustments mentioned previously. Better than expected adjusted EBITDA in the quarter was driven in part by a slower ramp in technology and development spending versus plan. We continue to make material investments in technology and data science to deliver on the full promise of Whole-person care at scale and we are anticipating a material ramp-up in investment in the fourth quarter and into next year. Net loss in the third quarter was $84 million compared to a net loss of $36 million in the same quarter last year. The wider net loss was primarily attributable to increased stock-based compensation and amortization of acquired intangibles. On a per-share basis, net loss was $0.53 for the third quarter compared to a net loss of $0.43 in the prior year's quarter. Net loss per share includes stock-based compensation expense of $0.45, loss and extinguishment of debt of $0.01, and amortization of acquired intangibles of $0.28. We ended the quarter with $826 million in cash and short-term investments. While our total recorded debt outstanding as of quarter-end was $1.2 billion. Operating cash flow in the quarter was $77 million. Now, turning to forward guidance. For the full-year 2021, we now expect revenue to be in the range of $2.015 to $2.025 billion. We expect adjusted EBITDA in 2021 in the range of $260 to $265 million. As discussed previously, we are reinvesting cost synergies back into the business to fuel long-term growth, including the roll-out of new capabilities and new products such as myStrength Complete and Primary360, continued integration of Livongo, enhancements to our integrated data platforms, and expansions into new markets. We now expect total visits in 2021 to be between 14.5 million and 14.7 million visits, representing growth of 37% to 39% over the prior year. For the fourth quarter of 2021, we expect revenue of $536 to $546 million, representing growth of 40% to 42% over the prior year's quarter. We expect total paid membership in the range of 52.5 to 53.5 million and anticipate total visits during the fourth quarter of between 3.9 and 4.1 million visits, which represents year-over-year growth of 32% to 39%. We expect fourth quarter adjusted EBITDA to be in the range of $69 to $74 million. With that, I will turn the call back to Jason for closing remarks.
Jason Gorevic, CEO
Thanks, Mala. Finally, I would like to add that in the midst of all the third quarter efforts we just shared, Teladoc Health, as a combined Company, earned certification as a great place to work. As some of you may know, this premier organization evaluates the Company's cultural health based on both objective measures and employee surveys before conferring its designation. And we were excited to get this positive report card in the wake of fully integrating our teams. As always, thank you for your continued interest in Teladoc Health. We look forward to sharing more at our Investor Day on November 18th. And with that, we'll open the call for questions.
Operator, Operator
Thank you, Jason. Due to time constraints, please limit yourself to one question. Thank you. Please hold while we compile the Q&A roster. Our first question comes from Lisa Gill at JPMorgan. Please go ahead with your question.
Lisa Gill, Analyst
Thanks very much, and good afternoon. Jason, I just want to go back to your comments around Whole-person and that will be meaningful over the next few years. So just to understand this a little bit better, can you help me around how to think about virtual primary care versus traditional when we think about both revenue and profit? And when you say meaningful over the next several years, is that a meaningful driver in 2022?
Jason Gorevic, CEO
So, thanks Lisa. I'm really excited about our Whole-person suite of capabilities. And let me go sort of first with what we mean by Whole-person, and then lean into a deeper discussion of Primary360. So, when we talk about Whole-person, we mean the philosophy of taking care of the entire person. Both their physical health and their mental health, their acute episodic needs, as well as their chronic and complex needs, as well as taking care of them on a preventive basis. Things like making sure that they're getting their screenings, making sure that they're eating properly and have the counsel over registered dietitian and our nutrition programs, and that they have both digital and human interactions. So, it's a model that brings digital modules to them when that's appropriate, as well as a full care team that's there for them. And we've proven our ability to do that. And the appeal of that with the number of people who are now enrolled in multiple chronic care condition programs for us, as well as our ability to sell mental and physical health together. And we continue to see very, very strong results in multi-product sales into our clients. And so, what we see is that Whole-person approach really resonates with the market, both with clients at the purchasing level, as well as with consumers at the utilization level. As I go deeper into Primary360, we're very excited to have announced relationships with CVS for their Aetna self-insured clients, and virtual-first plan designs that will be rolling out in that market nationally, as well as with Centene in their better programs on the exchanges. Again, with virtual-first plan design, the economics are greater than our traditional general medical programs or the combination of a general medical and mental health program, because we're bringing the full care continuum, so to speak, to bear for the consumer that takes advantage of our entire suite of capabilities. When we talk about a meaningful impact, we expect to see substantial growth off of an admittedly small base in '22 and in '23 and beyond, and we expect that to have a meaningful impact on our overall financials as a Company. And maybe last before I hand over to Molla for any additional commentary, I will just preview that we're going to do a deeper dive into our Primary360 product, as well as the opportunity for us to enter into more value-based arrangements to capture a bigger part of the savings that we generate when we host our Investor Day in three weeks.
Lisa Gill, Analyst
I was going to take that question for the Analyst Day, Jason, but Mala, if you want to comment at all from a value-based perspective. Just listening to everything that you just said and thinking about value-based programs that are out there, thinking about capitation. This all sounds like this is very well suited. As we think about some of those new programs that are coming to the market. So, Mala, if you can add any commentary around the financial impact, but I'm just curious, Jason, do you see Teladoc taking risk in this area, and maybe that's something you're going to talk about at the Analyst Day.
Jason Gorevic, CEO
I do see us taking risk and I think we'll step into that. And I am thinking of a slide that we're going to show at our Investor Day that demonstrates the degrees of risk and the progress that we'll make going from first clinical measures to then risk corridors to ultimately capitation. Of course, you have to draw a box around that to make sure that we're taking credit for the savings we're generating, where we're generating it, and we're not taking risk outside the scope of where we can have an impact. So, I think you'll see a lot more depth on that at our Analyst Day.
Mala Murthy, CFO
Yeah. And I would add to the point Jason just made. The fact that we have the data and the data science capabilities that we have, and the integrated data that we are hard at work on. All of those types of capabilities along with the scale of technology that we have, is what we will bring to there as we go on the journey and expanding Primary360. The only other thing I wanted to say, Lisa, and again, we'll talk more about this and other levers of growth on Investor Day. We, as you think about the opportunity for us to penetrate deeper into our member base and think about revenue per member expansion. We are excited about Primary360 as one of the many levers we have to expand our revenue per member. Again, I still go back to what Jason said. We expect this to be a multiyear journey with meaningful increases in the 3 to 4 years ahead.
Operator, Operator
Thank you. Your next question comes from the line of Sean Wieland from Piper Sandler. Please proceed with your question.
Sean Wieland, Analyst
Thanks very much. I wanted to ask about some of the changing privacy landscapes out there eliminating apps' ability to track us all over the place. What impact do you think this will have on your DTC market strategy and marketing costs?
Jason Gorevic, CEO
Sean, I don't think that that will have an impact at all. One of the things that I'm really proud of relative to our DTC efforts is, number one, our focus on privacy and compliance. But number two, also our focus on diversifying the channels through which we acquire new members and attract new members. And I know that there are plenty of companies that are very focused on one or two channels. We've done an excellent job over the last several years of diversifying into multiple channels and always doing it in a way that focuses on the member first. So, I don't think it'll have an impact at all, Sean.
Operator, Operator
Thank you. Your next question comes from the line of Jailendra Singh from Credit Suisse. Please proceed with your question.
Jailendra Singh, Analyst
Thank you. Hello, everyone. I wanted to follow up on your projection of 25% to 30% standalone Chronic Care revenue growth for next year. I understand it may be challenging to break this down, but does this figure account for any synergies anticipated from the Teladoc-Livongo merger? Additionally, you mentioned adopting a conservative outlook. Could you clarify what factors are influencing this? Are you being conservative regarding enrollment and adoption of Livongo, or is it more about expectations for multi-product enrollment?
Jason Gorevic, CEO
Yes. So, I'll comment on the second part. And when we talk about Chronic Care management and our outlook, we've done a lot of work to make sure that we're very focused on the discipline that we bring and have always brought to our management of the pipeline and our forecasting process. When we look at the Chronic Care, the pipeline, I sort of break it into the different customer channels. I would say we have been very successful in selling into the health plan channel over the course of this year and our pipeline still looks strong with new opportunities. Many of those opportunities, either the existing sales that we've made or the ones in our pipeline are the permission and the partnership with the health plan to go sell to their self-insured clients. That takes a couple of years to unlock the full value of it because you have to go through the renewal cycle and the selling cycle to those self-insured clients. And so, we're trying to be very realistic about the sort of on-ramp of those clients in the health plan segment. With respect to the employer market, that's a market where our products are extremely attractive. And historically, we've been very successful at selling into the employer market directly when we sell directly to large employers. That's a market where the benefits managers have paused over the course of this year more than we've seen in the past, and it's really due to COVID and them being focused on the pandemic and return to work. As I talk to our employer sales team, they see that picking up substantially as we get to the end of the year. People are starting to get back to the office and the benefits managers are starting to think about more of a return to normal. And they're optimistic as we look into next year's selling cycle. And then there are two channels that I would say are just moving more slowly than we had originally anticipated. And again, we want to be conservative in our outlook. The broker channel, we had high expectations and we're just starting to see that pick up now. It took a while to educate the brokers. We have a large distributed broker network, and it took a little while to educate them on a product set that they really didn't have access to before. We're now starting to see that pick up substantially and we're excited about next year's selling season for that. And then lastly, international. I think in the international markets, we have to go through both regulatory hurdles in terms of local certifications and approvals, but also localizing our products to various international markets. We're doing that in a fairly methodical approach, market-by-market. So, I think we will see growth internationally, but we don't have really anything in our plan for next year on a substantial basis. And then maybe the last thing I'll say is that's been positively offset by our growth in the hospital and health system market where we've noted before that we've seen especially risk-bearing hospitals really lean into the Chronic Care solutions. And that's going better than we had expected. So, when you put all of that together and we take a critical look at the pipeline and our forecast, that’s where we landed on that 25% to 35% outlook. Again, that's a contributor to our overall outlook of approximately $2.6 billion in revenue next year.
Operator, Operator
Thank you. The next question comes from the line of Stephanie Davis from SVB Leerink. Please proceed with your question.
Stephanie Davis, Analyst
Hey guys. Thank you for taking my question, for the quarter. I was hoping you could give us a broader view on the new Primary360 offering and how it ties into the existing health system. Is this something we could see it tie into your existing chronic care solution, or should we think of it as a standalone play that almost competes with the existing health system?
Jason Gorevic, CEO
We see our role, and this has always been the case. We believe that we can transform the healthcare experience and transform how people get care by working with the healthcare system and the physical delivery system and integrating into it. I've been quoted many times as saying, I don't think healthcare is ripe for disruption. We actually don't use that word when we talk about what our role is. Rather, we think our role is to work with the physical delivery system to improve the care that's ultimately delivered. Now, look, we have certain advantages over the physical delivery system, and we have two billion data points in our data platform of Chronic Care measurements from our Chronic Care tools. We're delivering over 25,000 personalized health nudges every day. That is because we have this depth of data. We're providing over 30,000 virtual visits on average every day. So, when you put all of that together, we have this incredibly rich set of data. We believe that we can really transform the primary care experience and the health outcomes from primary care. We also recognize that we can't do everything. There's care that has to be delivered in person, and that comes in a number of forms. We'll integrate with certain partners for the last mile delivery, whether that's in-home lab testing, or in-home care that can be done in the home, but needs to be physically delivered or referring into the most efficient parts of the delivery system. And to your exact question, I think the places where that will happen most seamlessly are the providers who are using our technology platform. Because we can make a seamless handoff to them and really act like a concierge for the consumer, but we also recognize that we have to be responsive to our health plan partners and refer into the most efficient parts of their delivery network. So, I don't view it as a competing approach. I really think that there's an opportunity for us to improve the overall performance of the healthcare system and work with the healthcare system.
Mala Murthy, CFO
And the other thing I'd also add, Stephanie, is we are beginning to open the door to conversations that health system leaders around creating virtual front doors within their markets. So, it's the health plan as Jason talked about, it's also around health systems, the role that primary care plays within their ecosystem. This is where our Primary360 products can also be relevant.
Operator, Operator
Thank you. The next question comes from the line of Richard Close with Canaccord. Please proceed with your question.
Richard Close, Analyst
Thank you. Jason, I was wondering if you could give us an update on myStrength Complete that I think you've rolled out here recently over the last quarter, so just an update there. I didn't hear anything in your comments.
Jason Gorevic, CEO
We're really excited about myStrength Complete. So, Richard, just to recap, myStrength Complete really brings together the mental health assets of Livongo and Teladoc to deliver a true stepped care model. We bring digital solutions that enable digital modules for the consumer around things like cognitive behavioral therapy, dialectical behavioral therapy, mindfulness, and other skills, combined with the Livongo legacy coaches and the network of PhD psychologists and Master's level social worker therapists and psychiatrists from Teladoc into the full continuum of care on the mental health front. We're excited about how the pipeline is building. I think we mentioned that we had made several sales even before the product was launched in the market. The pipeline is showing continued momentum, up strong double-digits in terms of a percentage quarter-over-quarter and contributing to our overall outlook as we look into next year. I think the other thing I would just say is I expect myStrength Complete to really complement the rest of our other physical health products. So, we're very excited about it and seeing good momentum in the market. It's also a product that we're just beginning the rollout of internationally, so I don't think that will be limited to the U.S.
Operator, Operator
The next question comes from the line of Ryan Daniels from William Blair. Please go ahead.
Ryan Daniels, Analyst
Great, thank you for taking the questions. Jason, this is something you're asked probably every two to three quarters and I want to give you another shot at this, but I'm curious what you're seeing more broadly in the competitive environment, in particular, with some of the on-site health clinics starting to offer more telehealth solutions and a lot of coalescence around digital healthcare with entities like the patient navigation companies. They're integrating things like second opinion services and telehealth and trying to sell that through brokers directly to employers. Can you provide a little bit of a state of the union, if you will, on what you're seeing in the competitive landscape as it sounds like your win rate and retention remains very strong. Thanks.
Jason Gorevic, CEO
Yes, thanks, Ryan. Maybe I will start with the last point you made and just confirm that. Our win rates are staying very similar to prior years. So, as we look at sort of doing the pipeline review now and where our win rates are seeing very similar to where we were in prior years. In spite of the fact that everyone knows there's been a lot of investment in the space. Second, our retention rates are extremely strong. And third, we're seeing really good multi-product sales. So, 70% of our bookings this year were multi-product sales as compared to about 50% last year, which I think really points to the reason that we're winning. We're winning because of the full suite of our products and services. And the truth is, that the point solutions I would say are really struggling at this point. If you look at our late-stage pipeline, it's nearly double versus the size of what it was last year. I wouldn't probably want to be an onsite provider at this point since a lot of companies are talking about going virtual, and that has its limitations. Similarly, when I look at the navigation companies, I would say, honestly, having been a health plan president, the administrative side of that is fairly low value. I really want to, and we have always focused on making a big clinical impact using our data and our clinical expertise to improve the health of consumers and really focus on the healthcare and not the administrative portion. As I said, I do think we will play a big role especially with our Primary360 in helping to get the consumer to the best site of care based on who the most efficient provider is in their local geography. We can do that in a way that is untethered because we don't have a financial incentive to refer to any specific provider in the market, which is not the case for a lot of the sort of hybrid models that are out there. I think we can be really pure to our mission of improving care and reducing the cost of care. And then lastly, I'll say, there was a recent conference where the team that came back said that the big sentiment there was pretty anti-payer in the conference. A lot of the earlier stage companies were very anti-payer, and we recognize the role of the payer in the market. We really want to partner with the payers and the employers to bring the best care to the consumer. It's always been our position in the market. We think we're uniquely positioned to do that in partnership with the delivery system rather than antagonistically.
Operator, Operator
The next question comes from the line of Charles Rhyee from Cowen. Please proceed with your question.
Gwen, Analyst
Hey guys, this is Gwen on for Charles. When talking about your DTC mental health offering, even though we know that an average subscription might be, say, three or four months long, how often does someone come back and say they start a new subscription later on? So, in other words, even if we're seeing higher customer acquisition costs, are you seeing a level of customer retention such that you don't necessarily have to spend the CAC each time to gain that same user back? Thanks.
Jason Gorevic, CEO
Yes. So, I'll start. I'm incredibly proud of our DTC team and the progress they've made. First, they've done a tremendous job based on some of the comments I made earlier about diversification and optimization around our customer acquisition costs. The team is constantly testing new, more efficient models and then rolling out those models on the customer acquisition side. So, our cost of customer acquisition has come down very consistently. Second, as we look at our revenue to customer acquisition cost ratio, that's improved substantially over time. And it's because of what I would say, the first thing I mentioned, of course, customer acquisition costs coming down. But also, that the team has done a phenomenal job with the lifetime value of a member and improving the LTV of a member. They do that obviously, through two levers. One is pricing optimization and continuing to test different models for that. The other is rolling out value-added services and retention strategies. An example of those is that a consumer can go to a lower cost, lighter version of the product on an interim basis, sort of as they are in a better place in their lives, or not leaning into as much active therapy over a period of time, but it keeps them engaged with the platform and getting some level of mental health care and support, so they can reignite a more intensive therapy period and of course at a higher price, at some later date. We've also rolled out things like groupinars and worksheets that a consumer can use in order to track their own progress and work on things between interactions. Your point is excellent, and I'm glad you asked it because in order to make a business like that continue to improve, you have to be pulling a lot of different levers, and I would say we are very, very good at test, learn, and scale.
Mala Murthy, CFO
As you know, when we refer to this business as being focused on execution, that aligns with what Jason discusses as essential. It involves testing, learning, and scaling, which is what we mean by execution. This approach is driving the growth and the margins we are observing in the business.
Jason Gorevic, CEO
And we'll spend some time on our mental health programs, both B2B as well as direct-to-consumer at our Analyst Day on November 18th.
Operator, Operator
Thank you. The next question comes from the line of Sean Dodge from RBC Capital Markets. Please proceed with your question.
Sean Dodge, Analyst
Thanks. Good afternoon. Maybe staying on BetterHelp, Jason, earlier in the year, you had said that that was expected to grow at least 50% this year. And it sounds like the tone, and I think you even said it directly, that DTC is continuing to outperform. Can you give us a progress in update on how much that business that contributed or how much it has outperformed that kind of initial 50% growth expectation year?
Mala Murthy, CFO
Yeah. So, Sean, give us three weeks, and we will satisfy all the questions you asked and the curiosity you have around that. But the headline I would say is we are very pleased with the growth of this business. And you're right, the growth expectations we had set out is what you just said. I would just say, at this point, that we are very pleased with how this business has grown, again, as I said, on a revenue growth standpoint, as well as from a margin standpoint. And we will talk to where the business is in terms of scale. And also importantly, how we are thinking about the growth of this business in the future when we get to Investor Day.
Operator, Operator
The next question comes from the line of Daniel Grasslight from Citigroup. Please proceed with your question.
Daniel Grasslight, Analyst
Hi guys. Thanks for taking the question. With a similar question to Ryan on the competitive dynamic, but specifically focused on the virtual-first primary care plans that have come out, it seems like every large MCO now has announced a virtual first pilot in some regard. So, I'd love to get your thoughts on just the competitive dynamic there, with the third-party vendors, but in particular, like to get your thoughts on the potential for managed care organizations to utilize their own provider networks, like what we're seeing with United, and what they're doing with their Optum Virtual Care group, rather than partnering with folks like you guys for your virtual network. Thanks.
Jason Gorevic, CEO
Yes. So, I think there are relatively few health plans in the country who have the capability and the owned provider assets that the United has with its Optum Care owned providers. And of course, they're rolling out that product in the markets where they own those substantial number of primary care providers. We believe a virtual first health plan is a natural national product and should be available in all geographies. We've got a great relationship with United, and we have a number of new opportunities in the pipeline right now across United in multiple parts of their business. When it comes to other health plans, quite frankly, we see a benefit to some of the big plans making announcements about virtual first plans because local plans, quite frankly, have to respond. We're seeing that as a catalyst for activity, RFP activity with our Primary360 products, new pipeline opportunities, and a sense of urgency from multiple plans across the country in response to that. We think quite frankly, because of the breadth of our product portfolio and the scalability of our platform, we'll win more than our fair share of those opportunities. And as we've talked about, those tend to be compelling economics because we play a bigger role with the consumer.
Operator, Operator
The next question comes from the line of George Hill with Deutsche Bank. Please proceed with your question.
George Hill, Analyst
Hey. Good afternoon, guys. And thank you for taking the question. I guess Jason, just as you think about Primary360, can you talk about how much of it you think is net new growth versus the ability to grow wallet share with an existing client? And then following on that trend, I know this is probably going to be one of those questions that preempts Analyst Day, but I would love for you to talk for a second about how big you think Teladoc can be inside of the beneficiary wallet share, particularly inside of that employer sponsor spend.
Jason Gorevic, CEO
Yes. Thanks, George. You're right. Some of that we will cover at Investor Day, specifically around the economic opportunity for the full stack of our products and services. When I think about Primary360, I think the answer is it will be both a driver of net new growth as well as an expansion within existing clients. Obviously, when you talk about somebody like an Aetna, we've had a long-standing relationship with Aetna for many years and many products. This is an expansion of our role there. Quite frankly, a bigger economic opportunity for us due to that expansion of our role. But I also look at other health plans where we're seeing opportunities, both formal RFPs, as well as deep strategic discussions about the role of Primary360 and virtual-first plan designs, and their new relationships that we haven't had before. And lastly, the opportunity that Molla mentioned about bringing Primary360 to wrap around the hospital is a significant opportunity. I can think of a conversation I had with a CEO of a large academic medical center that is multi-site and multifaceted just two weeks ago. The discussion was about how we can stand up a virtual primary care offering that is essentially the front door to their system and takes care of their patients in a branded way. We do that almost white-labeled for them. So, I think we're going to see new opportunities for that product and that capability that's beyond what we can imagine today.
Operator, Operator
Your next question comes from the line of Donald Hooker from KeyBanc. Please proceed with your question.
Donald Hooker, Analyst
Great. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you very much. I was curious about the maybe the platform enabled solutions metric that you share. And I was thinking about that metric in the context of all that I hear about regarding labor shortages and wage pressures with health systems. I'm wondering if there is any emerging opportunity to work with providers in that context and around that metric?
Jason Gorevic, CEO
It's a good question. We observed a notable shift as offices closed, and both consumers and providers rapidly adopted virtual care in a way that hadn't happened before. I believe this presents a lasting opportunity moving forward. I've spoken to CEOs, including those from smaller facilities, who anticipate that 25% to 50% of visits will be virtual in the long term, which is something nobody would have predicted earlier. I also see the potential for virtual care to eliminate physical barriers and increase workforce mobility, especially regarding the labor market. However, I want to caution that there are state regulatory challenges to consider. Many states have reinstated requirements for in-state licensure to deliver care. We have always navigated those regulations, so it isn't a barrier for us, but I've heard many hospital system CEOs express concerns as it restricts their workforce's reach.
Mala Murthy, CFO
I would also add that on the positive side, I think what is increasingly clear as we come out to some extent from the other side of the pandemic is the platform we have is purpose-built, and that is differentiated from just having a Zoom experience, for example. There is a difference in the platform we have, and that is increasingly helping the conversations that we're having with the C-suite of health systems.
Jason Gorevic, CEO
You may recall that we announced a partnership with Microsoft to deeply integrate our provider platform into Microsoft Teams. We're seeing that drive substantial growth in our pipeline. So, we're excited about that and we think that that will have the desired effect.
Operator, Operator
Your next question comes from the line of Ravi Misra from Berenberg Capital Markets. Please proceed with your question.
Ravi Misra, Analyst
Hi. Good evening. Thank you for taking the questions. So just two from me, both on Chronic Care. The first one, can you just tease out a little bit on the 25% to 35% Chronic Care growth, how you think about in terms of enrollment versus pricing? And then secondly, it's been about almost two years since the Livongo-Dexcom agreement was announced. Can we get a little bit more color on how that stands today and maybe how high you're looking to go forward on that and thank you?
Jason Gorevic, CEO
Yes. So, with respect to the Livongo-Dexcom partnership, we expanded that last year. As we move more into testing CGM and being able to apply our data science against the data flow that can come from CGM, we haven't published or publicized the results, but we have seen some good early indicators relative to that. I think CGM will be just another data source for us. Obviously for certain populations, CGM is more effective than for others and more and more cost-effective than for others. This is really testing the impact of CGM on type two diabetics. So, I think you'll see us continue to test new models along that path. With respect to the makeup of the 25% to 35% growth, we haven't broken that out publicly. I don't think we're going to do that here. You will get a deeper dive into the market for Chronic Care programs as well as our expectations for Chronic Care at our Investor Day.
Operator, Operator
Next question comes from the line of David Larsen from BTIG. Please proceed with your question.
David Larsen, Analyst
Hi. The visit volume growth was very good in the quarter, up 37% year-over-year. Can you provide any color around how much of that came from BetterHelp visits, if any? And then also, within your membership right now, what percentage do you think would be eligible for a virtual primary care physician? Is it like 25%, do you think, like the national average? Thanks very much.
Jason Gorevic, CEO
We are really excited about our growth in visit volume. A year ago, many were skeptical about our ability to sustain this growth following the significant increase we experienced the previous year. We're incredibly proud of our achievements, having seen growth from both direct-to-consumer and B2B channels, although we don’t disclose these figures separately. Our visit revenue increased by 18% year-over-year, with all visit revenue generated from the B2B channel. Additionally, repeat usage is strong, with a 25% year-over-year increase in the third quarter, which is a positive sign and aligns with J.D. Power’s recognition of us for highest consumer satisfaction. We've also observed significant growth in multi-service usage among consumers, which is currently available only to our B2B clients.
Mala Murthy, CFO
We're experiencing significant growth in specialty visits, particularly in mental health, as mentioned in our prepared remarks. Additionally, we have seen consistent strong growth in noninfectious diseases. Recently, there has also been an increase in visit volume for infectious diseases. All of this is contributing to our overall visit volume growth.
Operator, Operator
Thank you. And this concludes our question-and-answer session. I will now turn the call back to Jason Gorevic. Please go ahead.
Jason Gorevic, CEO
Thanks, everybody. Appreciate your attention and all of your questions. We look forward to seeing everybody in three weeks on November 18th at our Investor and Analyst Day. Take care.
Operator, Operator
Thank you, ladies and gentlemen. This concludes our conference call. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.