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Conditions We Treat

Specialized care for mental health challenges and alcohol use disorder, including dual diagnosis support for adults facing both at once. Whatever you're facing, there's a path forward.

What You Can Do Here

Learn about treatment options for your specific condition
Understand dual diagnosis and co-occurring disorders
Find care with specialized mental health expertise
Connect with support that understands your needs
Browse Treatment Options

Substance Use

Treatment for alcohol use disorder and related substance use concerns

Affects: 14.4 million adults

Comprehensive treatment for alcohol use disorder including detox, therapy, and recovery support

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Mental Health & Dual Diagnosis

Integrated care for mental health conditions, including when they occur alongside substance use

Affects: 21 million adults

Dual diagnosis treatment for depression and substance use disorders

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Affects: 40 million adults

Specialized care for anxiety and panic disorders with addiction

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Affects: 3.5% of adults

Trauma-informed treatment for PTSD and co-occurring addiction

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Affects: 9.2 million adults

Comprehensive care for co-occurring mental health and substance use disorders

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Frequently Asked Questions

Dual diagnosis (or co-occurring disorders) treatment addresses a mental health condition and a substance use concern at the same time. This integrated approach matters because treating only one side often leads to relapse. Programs typically combine medication management, therapy, and support groups.

Treatment length depends on the condition, its severity, and how someone is progressing. Detox lasts 3-7 days, initial treatment runs 30-90 days, and ongoing recovery support can continue for months or years. Your care team builds a timeline around your specific needs.

It's common to face more than one condition at once — for example, alcohol use alongside depression or anxiety. Treatment teams experienced with co-occurring conditions build one comprehensive plan rather than treating each issue in isolation.

Yes. Trauma-informed care recognizes that many people with addiction have a trauma history. Programs using this approach create safe environments, screen for trauma, and weave in evidence-based therapies like EMDR and Cognitive Processing Therapy alongside addiction treatment.

If substance use or a mental health symptom is disrupting your relationships, work, health, or daily life — and stopping on your own hasn't worked — treatment can help. A professional assessment can point you toward the right level of care.

The Scope of Addiction in America

20.4M

People living with a substance use disorder

9.2M

People facing addiction and mental illness together

50.5M

Adults experiencing a mental health challenge

Source: SAMHSA National Survey on Drug Use and Health

When Addiction and Mental Health Overlap

Understanding Dual Diagnosis

Nearly half of people with addiction also live with a mental health condition. This is called dual diagnosis or co-occurring disorders. Treating only one side of it often leads to relapse.

  • • Depression and alcohol use disorder
  • • Anxiety disorders and alcohol use
  • • PTSD and substance use
  • • Dual diagnosis needing integrated behavioral health care

Integrated Treatment Works

The best outcomes happen when both conditions are treated together by a team that understands the connection between them. We can help you find that kind of care.