Bharosa Neuropsychiatry Hospital
Bharosa Neuropsychiatry Hospital

Why Drug Abuse Treatment Fails Without a Psychiatric Diagnosis | Bharosa

Four rehabs. Four discharges. Four homecomings where he looked better than he had in years. And four relapses, each one within months. The family is exhausted. The savings are gone. And somewhere in their hearts, they have started to believe what nobody dares say out loud — maybe he is just beyond help.

He is not beyond help. He has been receiving the wrong kind of help. At Bharosa Neuro Psychiatry Hospitals Hyderabad, we see this pattern every single week. Patients who have cycled through three, four, five addiction programmes. Each centre treating the substance as if it dropped out of the sky. None of them ever asked the one question that mattered most — why did this start in the first place?

Addiction Is Often Self-Medication for Untreated Mental Illness

Substance use rarely begins as a hobby. It usually begins as a solution. According to the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, roughly 50 percent of people with a Substance Use Disorder (SUD) also meet criteria for at least one other mental illness. This is called dual diagnosis or co-occurring disorder. The pattern is consistent across substances.

People with untreated depression often turn to alcohol to numb the heaviness. People with social anxiety drink to feel comfortable in groups. People with attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) use stimulants to focus and feel normal. People with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) use opioids or cannabis to dampen flashbacks and hyperarousal. People with bipolar disorder use stimulants in depressive phases and depressants in manic phases. The American Psychiatric Association, the leading professional body of psychiatrists in the United States, has documented these patterns for decades. Without identifying and treating the underlying psychiatric condition, the addiction simply returns — often within weeks of leaving treatment. The substance was never the real problem. It was the patient's attempt at a solution to a problem nobody had diagnosed.

How Standard Drug Rehab Programmes Miss the Real Diagnosis

Most addiction-only rehab programmes are not staffed by psychiatrists. They are staffed by counsellors, recovering addicts, and well-meaning support workers. These people can be invaluable — but they are not trained to diagnose or treat depression, bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, or PTSD. They cannot prescribe psychiatric medication. They cannot interpret a Beck Depression Inventory or a Mini International Neuropsychiatric Interview. They are doing the best they can with the tools they have, and the tools simply do not include the most important one — psychiatric diagnosis.

The U.S. National Institute of Mental Health is unambiguous on this point. Integrated treatment — meaning the simultaneous treatment of substance use disorder and mental illness by the same clinical team — produces significantly better outcomes than treating either condition alone. When a centre treats only the addiction, the patient leaves clean but psychiatrically untreated. The depression that drove the drinking is still there. The trauma that drove the opioid use is still there. The bipolar episodes that drove the cocaine binges are still there. Within weeks, the brain reaches for the only solution it has ever known.

Recognising the Signs of an Underlying Psychiatric Condition

Substance use began after a traumatic event, a major loss, or a significant life stressor. There is a personal or family history of depression, anxiety, bipolar disorder, or psychosis. During periods of sobriety, the person becomes profoundly depressed, anxious, or unstable rather than progressively better. Drug use seems to follow a pattern — heavier during certain seasons, certain moods, or certain social situations. Multiple previous rehab attempts have failed despite the patient genuinely trying. If you recognise three or more of these signs in your loved one, you are almost certainly looking at a dual diagnosis that has never been properly identified.

How Bharosa Treats the Real Problem

At Bharosa Neuro Psychiatry Hospitals Hyderabad, every patient who is admitted for substance use treatment first undergoes a complete psychiatric evaluation by a consultant MD Psychiatrist. We use validated diagnostic instruments, take a detailed personal and family history, and conduct any necessary investigations to identify co-occurring mental illness. If a dual diagnosis is identified — and it usually is — we treat both conditions simultaneously by the same clinical team.

This means appropriate psychiatric medication alongside detoxification, structured psychotherapy that addresses both the addiction and the underlying disorder, family education, and a long-term plan that prevents the patient from sliding back into self-medication after discharge. Patients who have failed multiple addiction-only programmes often respond dramatically when their underlying depression, anxiety, or trauma is finally diagnosed and treated. The transformation is not magic. It is what happens when the right diagnosis finally meets the right treatment.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: What is dual diagnosis in simple terms?

A: A person has both a substance use disorder and another mental illness at the same time. Both must be treated together.

Q: How is a psychiatric diagnosis actually made?

A: Through a structured clinical interview by a consultant psychiatrist, supported by validated tools and history.

Q: Will psychiatric medication make my loved one dependent on another drug?

A: No. SSRIs, mood stabilisers, and antipsychotics are not addictive.

Q: Why didn't the previous rehab centres pick this up?

A: They were not staffed by consultant psychiatrists. Counsellors cannot legally diagnose mental illness.

Q: What if my loved one resists psychiatric medication?

A: A skilled psychiatrist explains the reasoning, addresses fears, and adjusts the plan. Resistance usually fades with information.

If your loved one has been to rehab before and relapsed, the missing piece is almost certainly an undiagnosed psychiatric condition. Book a dual-diagnosis assessment at Bharosa Neuro Psychiatry Hospitals Hyderabad and finally treat the real problem. Call +91 95050 58886.



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Delaying treatment can extend suffering, but taking action now can bring relief and clarity.

Mental health struggles do not define you, and you don’t have to face them alone. If you notice any early signs of mental health disorders in yourself or a family member, take the first step today.

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