Why anxiety and depression often co-occur
Anxiety and depression share overlapping neurobiological pathways, genetic risk factors, and psychological mechanisms. Many of the same life experiences — chronic stress, trauma, loss — increase risk for both. Roughly 60%[1] of people with anxiety disorder will also develop depression at some point, and vice versa.
How co-occurring conditions affect treatment
Having both conditions doesn't mean treatment is twice as hard — it means finding a provider experienced in treating both simultaneously. Many evidence-based treatments address anxiety and depression together. CBT, for instance, has a robust evidence base for both conditions and is often the first-line treatment when they co-occur.
Integrated treatment approaches
Providers specializing in co-occurring anxiety and depression typically use:
- Unified Protocol — a transdiagnostic CBT approach targeting negative emotion across anxiety and depressive disorders
- Combined medication + therapy — SSRIs/SNRIs treat both conditions pharmacologically
- Behavioral Activation with exposure elements
- Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy (MBCT)
Finding the right provider
When searching for help with co-occurring anxiety and depression, look for providers who explicitly list both as specialties and who are trained in transdiagnostic or unified treatment approaches. Many excellent therapists treat both — ask during your initial consultation about their experience with co-occurring presentations.