Treatment Association Directory
Dual Diagnosis Treatment Centers
Search 5,111 facilities offering integrated treatment for co-occurring substance use and mental health disorders.
Treatment Association Directory
Search 5,111 facilities offering integrated treatment for co-occurring substance use and mental health disorders.
Approximately 50% of people with a substance use disorder also have a co-occurring mental health condition — and vice versa. Depression and alcoholism. PTSD and opioid dependence. Anxiety and benzodiazepine misuse. When both conditions exist simultaneously, treating only one while ignoring the other dramatically reduces the chance of recovery from either.
Dual diagnosis (or co-occurring disorder) treatment integrates substance abuse and mental health care into a single, coordinated program rather than sending patients to separate providers who may not communicate.
Traditional treatment often separated substance use and mental health care. A patient might complete rehab for addiction, only to relapse because their untreated depression or PTSD drove them back to use. Or they might see a psychiatrist for anxiety while their alcohol use — the actual cause of the anxiety — went unaddressed. Integrated dual diagnosis treatment addresses both conditions simultaneously with a coordinated clinical team. This approach produces significantly better outcomes because each condition is understood in the context of the other.
Depression and alcohol use disorder (the most common co-occurring pair). PTSD and opioid or stimulant use. Anxiety disorders and benzodiazepine or alcohol dependence. Bipolar disorder and substance use (affecting up to 60% of people with bipolar). ADHD and stimulant or cannabis misuse. Personality disorders and polysubstance use. Eating disorders and alcohol or stimulant use.
Ensure the program has both addiction medicine specialists AND psychiatrists on staff (not just one or the other). Ask whether they provide integrated treatment planning (one plan addressing both conditions) or parallel treatment (separate plans loosely coordinated). Verify they can manage psychiatric medications alongside MAT when needed. Check that their therapeutic programming addresses both substance use patterns and mental health symptoms. The best programs do not simply offer two separate tracks under one roof — they provide truly integrated care where every clinical decision considers both conditions.
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