Depression and addiction often occur together, and at Santa Barbara Recovery we treat both at once. For men using substances to cope with depression, treating the addiction alone leaves the depression in place to drive relapse. Our dual diagnosis care addresses the depression and the substance use together, with one team, across every level of care.
How Depression and Addiction Connect
Depression and addiction pull each other downward. A man weighed down by depression may use alcohol or drugs to feel something, to numb the flatness, or to get through the day, and the substance offers brief relief. That relief is short-lived and costly: it teaches reliance on the substance while doing nothing for the depression underneath.
The substance then deepens the depression. Alcohol is a depressant, and many drugs disrupt the brain chemistry that regulates mood, so heavier use tends to make depression worse over time. Worse depression drives more use, and the spiral continues. This is why treating only the addiction usually fails, the depression that fueled it is still there, still pulling.
How Men Often Experience It
Depression in men often does not look like sadness. It shows up as irritability, anger, restlessness, pulling away from people, or burying himself in work, and because it does not match what depression is supposed to look like, it goes unrecognized, by the man himself and by those around him. Substances become the way to manage a condition no one has named.
Recognizing the depression is often the turning point. For a man who has tried to get sober and could not hold it, the missing piece is frequently the depression he was using to escape. Naming it is not weakness, and the depression is treatable. Addressing it directly is usually what makes recovery finally possible.
How We Treat Depression and Addiction Together
We treat the depression and the addiction at the same time, with one clinical team. The substance use is stabilized through the appropriate level of care, while the depression is treated directly rather than left to lift on its own once a man is sober.
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy helps a man recognize and change the thought patterns that feed depression and using alike. Behavioral activation rebuilds the daily structure, activity, and connection that depression strips away. Where appropriate, psychiatric support addresses the depression medically. Treated together, both conditions improve in a way neither does when only one is addressed.
Care That Runs Through Every Level
Depression treatment runs through the whole continuum. From detox and residential through PHP, IOP, and outpatient, the depression work continues alongside the addiction work, with the same team and plan. As the structure steps down, the progress a man has made on his depression carries forward.
Insurance and Cost
We work with all major insurance providers, and most commercial plans cover dual diagnosis treatment for depression and addiction. Verify your benefits with us and we will tell you what is covered, quickly and confidentially, before you commit to anything.
Because the depression care is integrated into your level of care, it is covered the same way that care is. If you do not have insurance or it falls short, private pay and scholarship options exist. Call and we will walk through what is realistic.
- Inpatient Treatment:
Frequently Asked Questions
Which comes first, depression or addiction?
Either can come first, and it often does not matter clinically, because once both are present they feed each other. What matters is treating them together, which is what integrated dual diagnosis care does.
Does drinking make depression worse?
Yes. Alcohol is a depressant, and regular use tends to deepen depression over time even though it offers brief relief. Many drugs disrupt mood chemistry in similar ways. Treating the depression requires addressing the substance use too.
What does depression look like in men?
In men, depression often shows up as irritability, anger, withdrawal, or overworking rather than obvious sadness. Because it does not look like typical depression, it frequently goes unrecognized and untreated.
How do you treat depression and addiction together?
With one team treating both. The substance use is stabilized through the right level of care, while the depression is treated with therapies like CBT and behavioral activation and, where appropriate, psychiatric support.
Does insurance cover treatment for depression and addiction?
Yes. We work with all major insurance providers, and most plans cover dual diagnosis treatment as part of your level of care. We verify your benefits in minutes.
How do I start?
Call (805) 429-1203 or verify your insurance online. Admissions is open 24 hours a day, and we will walk you through the next step.
Treat the Depression and the Addiction. Start Today.
If you have been using to cope with depression, treating both together is what makes recovery hold, and the depression is treatable. We are here 24 hours a day. Call (805) 429-1203.
Medically Reviewed By
Dr. Courtney Scott, MD, Medical Director, board-eligible in Addiction Medicine.
Reviewed for clinical accuracy against ASAM guidelines, SAMHSA practice standards, and the National Institute on Drug Abuse.
Dr. Scott oversees medical care and clinical quality at Santa Barbara Recovery.




