What Is Anxiety Treatment?
Anxiety disorders are the most common mental health conditions in the United States, affecting more than 40 million adults. They encompass a range of conditions including generalized anxiety disorder (GAD), panic disorder, social anxiety disorder, obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), and specific phobias. Anxiety frequently co-occurs with depression and substance use disorders — many people use alcohol or other substances to temporarily relieve anxiety symptoms, which often worsens the condition over time. Residential and intensive treatment for anxiety is appropriate when outpatient therapy has not been sufficient.
Signs and Symptoms
Symptoms of anxiety disorders include persistent and excessive worry that is difficult to control, restlessness or feeling on edge, fatigue, difficulty concentrating, irritability, muscle tension, and sleep disturbances. Panic disorder additionally involves recurrent unexpected panic attacks — sudden episodes of intense fear with physical symptoms including heart pounding, sweating, trembling, shortness of breath, chest pain, nausea, dizziness, and fear of losing control or dying.
How Treatment Works
Evidence-based treatments for anxiety include cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), exposure and response prevention (ERP) for OCD, medication management (SSRIs, SNRIs, buspirone), and in some cases, acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT) or dialectical behavior therapy (DBT). For anxiety with co-occurring substance use, integrated dual diagnosis programs that address both simultaneously produce the best outcomes. Medication taper for benzodiazepine dependence requires careful medical management.
📞 Need Help Now?
If you or a loved one needs immediate help, call or text 988 — the Suicide and Crisis Lifeline — available 24/7, free and confidential. For substance use crisis support, call SAMHSA's National Helpline: 1-800-662-4357.
What to Look for in a Treatment Center
Seek programs with licensed therapists trained specifically in anxiety disorder treatment (CBT and exposure therapy), psychiatric medication management, and integrated care for any co-occurring substance use. Ask whether the program has specific experience with anxiety disorders versus general mental health.
Levels of Care
Anxiety treatment is available at residential (for severe anxiety with functional impairment), PHP (5–6 hours/day), IOP (3 days/week), and standard outpatient levels. The right level depends on how severely anxiety is affecting daily functioning and whether co-occurring conditions require more intensive care.
| Level of Care | Intensity | Typical Duration | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Medical Detox | Highest | 3–10 days | Physical withdrawal management |
| Residential (Inpatient) | Very High | 28–90 days | Severe addiction, unstable environment |
| Partial Hospitalization (PHP) | High | 2–6 weeks | Step-down from residential, high support |
| Intensive Outpatient (IOP) | Moderate | 6–12 weeks | Work/family obligations, strong home support |
| Medication-Assisted Treatment | Ongoing | Months to years | Opioid and alcohol use disorders |
| Sober Living | Low | 3–12+ months | Transition support, peer community |
Insurance and Cost
Mental health parity law requires commercial insurance and Medicaid to cover anxiety disorder treatment equivalent to physical health coverage. PHP and IOP programs for anxiety are generally covered when medically necessary.
Find Anxiety Treatment Programs Near You
Use the directory below to search for facilities in your state that offer anxiety treatment. Filter by insurance, level of care, and city.
Related Treatment Information
Medical Detox
Safe, supervised withdrawal management from substances.
Residential Treatment
24/7 structured inpatient care for serious addiction.
Intensive Outpatient
Flexible intensive treatment while living at home.
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