Dual-Diagnosis Treatment
at Keystone Health Group
More than half of people with substance use disorder also have a co-occurring mental health condition. Our integrated dual-diagnosis program treats both simultaneously — because treating only one rarely leads to lasting recovery.
What Is Dual-Diagnosis Treatment?
Dual-diagnosis treatment — also called co-occurring disorder treatment or integrated treatment — addresses both substance use disorder and mental health conditions simultaneously in the same program. This approach is more effective than treating each condition separately, because the two conditions are deeply intertwined: mental health conditions increase the risk of developing substance use disorder, and substance use worsens mental health symptoms.
According to SAMHSA, approximately 9.2 million adults in the United States have co-occurring mental health and substance use disorders. Despite this prevalence, many treatment programs still treat these conditions separately — leading to fragmented care and higher rates of relapse.
Our Integrated Approach
Comprehensive psychiatric assessment at admission to identify all co-occurring conditions
Board-certified psychiatrists manage psychiatric medications as part of integrated treatment
All treatment delivered through a trauma-informed lens with specialized trauma therapies available
CBT, DBT, EMDR, ACT, and other evidence-based modalities selected for each client's specific diagnoses
Conditions We Treat
Dual-Diagnosis Admissions
Our clinical team specializes in co-occurring disorders. Call for a free assessment.
Call NowTreating the Whole Person
Lasting recovery requires treating both addiction and the underlying mental health conditions that drive it.
Call for a Free Assessment