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Dual Diagnosis: Addiction and Mental Health Together

More than half of people in addiction treatment also have a mental health condition. Treating both together produces dramatically better outcomes.

Medically reviewed by Dr. Marcus Williams, MD · Last reviewed: May 2026 · Editorial standards
Substance Use · May 2026 · 8 min read

The rule, not the exception

If you're dealing with a substance use disorder, the odds are better than even that you also have a co-occurring mental health condition. SAMHSA data consistently shows that over half of people with substance use disorders have at least one co-occurring mental health condition — and among people with serious mental illness, substance use disorder rates are dramatically higher than in the general population.

This isn't coincidence. It reflects the deep neurobiological and psychological connections between addiction and mental health.

Why they co-occur so often

The relationship runs in multiple directions simultaneously. Mental health symptoms drive substance use — anxiety, depression, PTSD, and ADHD are all associated with significantly higher rates of substance use disorder, often as people attempt to self-medicate unbearable symptoms. But chronic substance use also causes or worsens mental health symptoms through neurological changes — disrupting dopamine systems, destabilizing mood, increasing anxiety, and precipitating psychosis in vulnerable individuals.

Both conditions also share genetic risk factors and common environmental precursors — particularly adverse childhood experiences and trauma.

The most common co-occurring combinations

Why integrated treatment is essential

Treating addiction without treating the underlying mental health condition leaves the primary driver of use unaddressed. Treating depression or anxiety without addressing substance use means working against a neurological headwind. Research consistently shows that integrated treatment — addressing both conditions simultaneously with a coordinated treatment team — produces significantly better outcomes than sequential or parallel treatment.

What integrated treatment looks like

Comprehensive assessment of both substance use and mental health history; coordinated medication management addressing both conditions; integrated individual and group therapy; trauma-informed care; and peer support from others with lived dual-diagnosis experience.

Finding dual diagnosis treatment

Search BehavioralHealthGuide.org filtering for "Substance Use" and "Dual Diagnosis" to find providers who specialize in co-occurring conditions. Ask specifically: "Do you treat both addiction and mental health conditions together, or do you refer out for one of them?" Integrated treatment in one place with one coordinated team produces the best outcomes.

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