the psychiatric problems caused the substance abuse.”

One way to combat the issue is to dispel in patient’s minds the “fallacy of self-medication,” as Lembke puts it.

“Once an addiction is in full swing it’s got its own life cycle,” Dr. Lembke said. “One of the big holes in the ‘self-medication’ hypothesis is that even if we are able to effectively treat the non-addiction psychiatric disorder, typically we don’t see substance abuse approve, unless we also treat the substance abuse disorder.

“There is a ton of data on this; people who have psychiatric disorders of any sort who are using drugs or alcohol in a maladaptive way have worse outcomes for their psychiatric disorder,” Lembke said. “They have more hospitalizations, more episodes and generally do poorer from a mental health perspective.”

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This is all of course not to say that patients cannot suffer from both substance abuse and a separate mental illness simultaneously, or that people do not have reasons for using drugs or alcohol. But that if a dual diagnosis is suspected, it is imperative that a patient not only receives treatment for the disorder but also the substance abuse.

Jacob Harper
Author: Jacob Harper

Jacob Harper is a contributor for Addiction Now. He has written for VICE, Reductress, Fox Digital, Equities, and the Travel Channel. Most recently, he was a writer and producer on the science/comedy TV show The Quick and The Curious. He was born and raised in Missouri and currently lives in Los Angeles. Contact Jacob at jacobh@drugaddictionnow.com.

Summary
Article Name
Treating a “dual diagnosis” of addiction and mental illness can sometimes be a case of simply treating the addiction
Description
According to the National Institute of Mental Health, 18.1 percent of the adult U.S. population — or approximately 43.6 million adults — suffer from some type of mental illness, and approximately 7.9 million Americans have a “dual diagnosis,” meaning they suffer from both mental illness and a drug and/or alcohol addiction simultaneously. However, in some cases, symptoms that could indicate a separate mental illness could be primarily or exclusively the result of the drug and/or alcohol abuse. Thus treatment for both could be accomplished by first treating the addiction.
Author
Jacob Harper
Publisher Name
Addiction Now