Medicaid, Medicare & most insurance accepted. Admissions open 24 hours. Call (855) 422-5772
dual-diagnosis Treatment · Aurora, Colorado

When addiction and mental health show up together, they get treated together.

Integrated dual diagnosis care with on-staff psychiatry, trauma-informed therapy, and medication management — under one roof, with one team. Medicaid, Medicare, and most insurance accepted.

  • On-staff psychiatry and medical management
  • Trauma-informed protocols (CBT, DBT, EMDR)
  • Integrated care plan — never siloed referrals
  • Common co-occurring conditions: depression, anxiety, PTSD, bipolar disorder

In-network or working with

Health First Colorado (Medicaid)MedicareAetnaBlue Cross Blue ShieldCignaUnitedHealthcareAnthemKaiser PermanenteHumanaTRICARESelf-pay & payment plans
Medically reviewed by Paramount Rehab Center Clinical Team Licensed addiction & behavioral health clinicians · Last reviewed May 1, 2026

Most people with addiction also have a mental health condition. That doesn’t make recovery harder — but it makes treatment different.

Roughly half of people who enter treatment for substance use disorder also meet criteria for at least one mental health diagnosis. The most common pairings: addiction with depression, anxiety disorders, PTSD, bipolar disorder, and ADHD.

For decades, the standard approach was to treat the two separately — send someone to rehab first, then refer them to a psychiatrist afterward. The data is clear that this doesn’t work. The two conditions interact: untreated mental health symptoms drive relapse, and active substance use makes mental health symptoms worse. Treating them in sequence keeps the person stuck in the cycle.

At Paramount, dual diagnosis is integrated by default. Psychiatric evaluation happens in the first 72 hours. Medication management is built into your care plan. The clinician treating your addiction is in regular contact with the clinician treating your mental health — often, they’re the same person.

What we treat alongside addiction

The most common co-occurring conditions we see:

Depression and persistent depressive disorder. Often present from before substance use began, sometimes triggered by it. Treated with a combination of therapy (CBT, behavioral activation) and SSRIs or other antidepressants where indicated.

Anxiety disorders. Generalized anxiety, panic disorder, and social anxiety frequently underlie alcohol and benzodiazepine misuse. We treat anxiety without prescribing benzodiazepines except in narrow, short-term clinical situations.

Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Especially common in opioid use disorder. EMDR (eye movement desensitization and reprocessing) and cognitive processing therapy (CPT) are the evidence-based front-line treatments, both available through our trauma-informed team.

Bipolar disorder. Often misdiagnosed as depression for years. Requires careful medication management with mood stabilizers — and a coordinated team that won’t withhold treatment because of stigma about the diagnosis.

ADHD. Common in stimulant use disorder. We treat ADHD with non-stimulant medications (atomoxetine, bupropion) and cognitive behavioral approaches; stimulant prescribing happens only under careful clinical conditions when warranted.

The work itself

Dual diagnosis care looks similar to standard addiction treatment in many ways — individual therapy, group, family work, medication management — but the clinical lens is wider. Every treatment decision considers both conditions: how the medication for one might interact with recovery from the other, how the therapy modality addresses both, how the discharge plan supports continued treatment for both.

This is the kind of treatment that’s hard to find at an affordable price point. Most facilities either do addiction or mental health well, not both. We built Paramount around integrating them because the data demands it.

What it costs

Dual diagnosis care is covered by Medicaid (Health First Colorado), Medicare, and commercial insurance under behavioral health benefits — same coverage as addiction treatment alone. We verify benefits at no cost.

Levels of Care

The right intensity, at the right moment.

Recovery isn't linear — and neither are our programs. We meet you where you are and step alongside as your needs change.

Most intensive

Residential

24/7 · 30–90 days

For when recovery requires distance from triggers and the anchoring of around-the-clock care.

  • 24/7 nursing & medical staff
  • Daily individual & group therapy
  • Detox medical supervision
Most flexible

Intensive Outpatient

9–15 hrs/week · 60–90 days

Built for those returning to work or family while keeping the structure of treatment.

  • 3-day or 5-day tracks
  • Morning & evening cohorts
  • Family programming included
Ongoing

Outpatient & Telehealth

1–4 hrs/week · ongoing

The long arc — weekly therapy, medication management, and lifetime alumni community.

  • Weekly individual therapy
  • Psychiatric medication mgmt.
  • Telehealth available statewide

Find out what your plan covers — in about 60 seconds.

We verify your benefits at no cost, before you commit to anything. Most callers find their treatment is fully or substantially covered.

Dual Diagnosis · FAQ

Questions about dual diagnosis treatment.

The questions families ask most when looking into this program.

What is dual diagnosis?
Dual diagnosis (or co-occurring disorder) means a person has both a substance use disorder and a mental health condition at the same time — for example, addiction plus depression, anxiety, PTSD, or bipolar disorder. It's extremely common: roughly half of people in treatment for addiction also meet criteria for at least one mental health diagnosis.
Will I have access to a psychiatrist?
Yes. Psychiatric evaluation is part of every dual diagnosis admission, and our addiction psychiatry team manages medications throughout your stay and afterward in outpatient care.
What if I'm not sure I have a mental health condition?
That's normal — many people only discover the diagnosis once they're sober. Our clinical team conducts thorough psychiatric assessments and uses standardized screening tools to identify what's underneath.
Is dual diagnosis treatment covered by insurance?
Yes. Medicaid (Health First Colorado), Medicare, and commercial insurance plans cover dual diagnosis treatment under behavioral health benefits. Both the addiction and mental health components are billed appropriately.

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