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Therapies Used in Dual-Diagnosis Treatment

Updated July 15, 2026

Dual-diagnosis treatment addresses a substance use disorder and a mental-health condition together. The term describes co-occurring needs; it is not itself a specific therapy or a diagnosis.

Why integrated assessment matters

Substance effects, withdrawal, trauma, sleep loss, medical illness and psychiatric conditions can produce overlapping symptoms. A qualified clinician should evaluate timing, severity, safety, medications and functional impact rather than assuming one condition explains everything.

Therapies that may be included

An individualized plan may use cognitive behavioral therapy, motivational approaches, contingency management, trauma-informed care, family work, skills training or other evidence-based interventions. Medication may be considered for a mental-health condition, a substance use disorder, or both. Not every method is suitable for every person.

Choosing a program

  • Ask whether both conditions are assessed and treated by qualified professionals.
  • Confirm access to psychiatric and medical care.
  • Ask how withdrawal, suicide risk and medication interactions are managed.
  • Verify licenses, services, insurance network and authorization requirements.
  • Ask how care continues after discharge or a change in level of care.

Frequently asked questions

What does dual diagnosis mean?

It generally means a person has both a mental-health condition and a substance use disorder.

Which condition should be treated first?

When possible, care should address both in a coordinated way while prioritizing immediate safety and medical needs.

Does everyone need residential treatment?

No. Level of care depends on safety, withdrawal, symptoms, functioning, environment and available support.

Can medication be part of treatment?

Yes. A qualified prescriber may recommend medication for a mental-health condition, substance use disorder or both.

Sources

Last reviewed: July 6, 2026. Educational information only; it is not a diagnosis or individualized medical advice.

Explore related FAR resources.

Reviewed By

Contributor

  • Amy Coblentz
    Clinical Reviewer:

    Amy Coblentz, RN with over 23 years of diverse clinical experience across medical-surgical nursing, home health, and women’s health. She currently serves as a Clinical Nurse Coordinator, providing clinical leadership, staff mentorship, and care coordination, and holds active ACLS, BLS, and NRP certifications.

     

Review scope: Licensed clinical review for educational accuracy and clarity.

Last reviewed: July 6, 2026


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