Dual Diagnosis Treatment Treat Both, or You’re Only Treating Half
When a mental health condition and a substance use problem show up together, treating one and ignoring the other is a setup for relapse. Our dual diagnosis program in Richardson, TX treats both at the same time, in one coordinated plan—so the anxiety, depression, or trauma underneath the using finally gets addressed alongside the using itself.
- One Integrated Plan
- Psychiatrist-Led Care
We Accept Most Insurance Plans:
We’ll verify your benefits in minutes — 100% confidential.
When mental health and substance use feed each other
A dual diagnosis—also called a co-occurring disorder—is when someone lives with both a mental health condition and a substance use disorder. It’s incredibly common: the drinking that quiets the anxiety, the stimulants that push back the depression, the trauma that never got treated until it turned into a habit. Each one makes the other worse, which is exactly why they have to be treated together.
One team, one plan—not a referral runaround
In a lot of systems, your therapist doesn’t talk to your prescriber, and your addiction counselor doesn’t know your trauma history. Care gets fragmented, and you fall through the cracks between it. Our dual diagnosis model puts mental health treatment and addiction treatment under one roof, with providers who share the same plan and the same goal.
That coordination is what makes recovery hold. When your medication, your therapy, and your relapse-prevention work all point the same direction, you stop treating symptoms in isolation and start treating the whole person.
The path through dual diagnosis treatment
Both conditions, addressed together, at the intensity you need.
- 01
Integrated assessment
We evaluate mental health and substance use at the same time, so the full picture—not half of it—shapes your plan.
- 02
Coordinated clinical plan
Therapy, psychiatric medication management, and addiction support built as one plan, with providers who actually talk to each other.
- 03
- 04
Relapse prevention for both
We build coping and recovery skills that protect your mental health and your sobriety at the same time.
Real People. Real Healing. Real Results.
Related care pathways
Dual diagnosis touches both sides of what we do—start wherever fits.
- 01
Mental Health Treatment
Depression, anxiety, PTSD, bipolar, and trauma care.
- 02
Addiction Treatment
Alcohol, opioids, and stimulants with medical oversight.
- 03
PHP
Intensive daytime structure for tougher stretches.
- 04
IOP
Flexible morning or evening care around your life.
Conditions, substances & where we treat
Mental health
Programs & places
Dual diagnosis questions, answered
Treating the whole person, not half of it.
A dual diagnosis, or co-occurring disorder, is when someone has both a mental health condition (like depression, anxiety, PTSD, or bipolar disorder) and a substance use disorder at the same time. The two conditions interact, so they're most effective to treat together.
Because they feed each other. Treating only the addiction leaves the anxiety or trauma that drives it; treating only the mental health condition leaves the substance use that destabilizes it. Integrated treatment addresses both in one plan, which dramatically improves the odds recovery holds.
Yes. Our psychiatric providers evaluate and manage medication as needed, and they coordinate directly with your therapists and addiction counselors so your whole plan is aligned.
Yes. We deliver it through PHP and IOP, so you get intensive, integrated care while living at home. If a medical detox is needed first, we'll help coordinate that step.
Most major plans cover medically necessary co-occurring care. Call 469-747-1201 and we'll verify your benefits and explain any costs before you start.