What Is Dual Diagnosis Treatment?
Dual diagnosis (also called co-occurring disorders) refers to the presence of both a substance use disorder and a mental health condition simultaneously. This is extremely common — research shows that more than half of people with a substance use disorder also have a mental health condition, and vice versa. Common combinations include depression and alcohol use disorder, anxiety and opioid addiction, PTSD and substance use, and bipolar disorder with stimulant use. In the Southeast, dual diagnosis treatment capacity has expanded but remains unevenly distributed.
Signs and Symptoms
Signs that dual diagnosis treatment may be needed include: substances are being used to self-medicate emotional pain, mental health symptoms continue after periods of sobriety, substance use began following a traumatic event or diagnosis, previous treatment that addressed only one disorder did not produce lasting recovery, or family history of both mental illness and addiction.
How Treatment Works
Integrated treatment — addressing both conditions simultaneously with the same treatment team — produces better outcomes than treating them sequentially or separately. This includes integrated assessment, concurrent therapy for both conditions, medication management by a psychiatrist, and trauma-informed approaches. Residential dual diagnosis programs provide the most intensive integrated care.
📞 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
Only consider programs that explicitly offer integrated dual diagnosis treatment. Ask about the psychiatric staff-to-patient ratio, whether medication management is included, and how trauma is addressed in the treatment model.
Levels of Care
Dual diagnosis programs exist at all levels of care: residential, PHP, IOP, and outpatient. The appropriate level depends on symptom severity and safety concerns.
| 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
Both mental health and substance use treatment must be covered at parity under federal law. Dual diagnosis programs should be billed appropriately to cover both conditions.
Find Dual Diagnosis Treatment Programs Near You
Use the directory below to search for facilities in your state that offer dual diagnosis 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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