Chief Clinical Officer
Last Reviewed
June 2026
Director Of Nursing
Depression is more than a low mood. It is persistent loss of interest, fatigue, disrupted sleep, difficulty concentrating, and at its worst, thoughts that life is not worth living. When it goes untreated, alcohol or drugs can feel like the only thing that quiets it. That relief is short, and the depression returns heavier than before.
Substance use disorder is a compulsive pattern that continues despite the harm it causes. What starts as self-medication for low mood becomes its own problem, changing brain chemistry in ways that deepen depression. Over time the substance stops working and the using continues anyway, driven by dependence rather than relief.
Depression and addiction commonly occur together, and each one can make the other worse. Depression may raise the risk of developing a substance use disorder. That is why treating only one side tends to fail. Drink or use to escape the low mood, feel briefly better, then wake to a deeper low and a growing dependence. Breaking that loop means working on both conditions at the same time, through our dual diagnosis program.
Depression and addiction commonly occur together, and each one can make the other worse. Depression may raise the risk of developing a substance use disorder. That is why treating only one side tends to fail.
The pattern is a loop. You drink or use to escape the low mood, feel briefly better, then wake to a deeper low and a growing dependence. Breaking that loop means working on both conditions at the same time. People also managing trauma-driven low mood may relate to our anxiety and addiction care, but depression has its own distinct treatment path.
Three things change when the cycle breaks: freedom from using substances to manage how you feel, real connection with people instead of isolation, and a clearer mind with a sense of purpose that does not depend on a substance.
01 · Low mood sets in
Persistent loss of interest, fatigue, disrupted sleep, and hopelessness make daily life feel unmanageable.
02 · Substance quiets it
Alcohol or drugs feel like the only thing that quiets the low mood. The relief is real and short.
03 · Depression deepens
The substance changes brain chemistry in ways that deepen depression. You wake to a heavier low than before.
04 · Dependence grows
The using continues anyway, now driven by dependence rather than relief. Both conditions reinforce each other.
This is the most common question we hear, and it changes the plan. Telling the two apart takes a careful assessment and time in early sobriety, not a guess on day one. Because alcohol is the substance most often paired with depression, this is also the bridge to our alcohol addiction treatment in Iowa.
How we decide: our clinicians track your mood through detox and the first weeks of recovery before settling the diagnosis. If the depression clears as your body heals, we focus on relapse prevention and skills. If it persists, we treat it as primary depression with therapy and, when appropriate, medication.
Heavy alcohol use can produce depression that lifts within weeks of sustained sobriety, known as substance-induced or alcohol-induced depression (NIAAA)2. When the low mood clears as the body heals, treatment shifts toward relapse prevention and skills rather than long-term antidepressant management. Recognizing this pattern early prevents over-treating a condition that resolves on its own.
Primary major depressive disorder persists even after the substance is gone and needs direct treatment in its own right (NIAAA; integrated-management review, NCBI)2. When depression remains after the body has healed, we treat it as primary depression with therapy and, when appropriate, medication, alongside the addiction work.
Getting this right changes the entire plan. Treating alcohol-induced depression as if it were lifelong primary depression means unnecessary medication; missing primary depression means it goes untreated and drives relapse. We settle the diagnosis with assessment and time in early sobriety, not a guess on day one.
Integrated treatment that addresses both conditions together produces better outcomes than treating them one after the other. The same clinical team manages your therapy, psychiatric care, and medication, rather than splitting them between providers who never talk.
Early sobriety is a vulnerable window. Co-occurring depression and substance use carry a higher risk of suicidal thoughts and behavior than either condition alone (SAMHSA)³, and that risk can rise in the first days as substances leave the body and feelings return. One study found that suicide rates were highest in the first six months of recovery, and an estimated 40% of individuals seeking substance use treatment reported a history of suicide attempts.⁴ We take this seriously, and safety is built into care from day one, not added after a crisis.
Risk tends to spike in the first days, then ease as the body heals and care takes hold. Tap a safeguard to see how we flatten that curve.
If you or someone you love is having thoughts of suicide right now, call or text 988, the Suicide and Crisis Lifeline, then call us at (319) 270-2890. We will help you take the next step.
If most of the following are familiar, dual diagnosis treatment for depression and addiction is likely the right fit. Tap each one that feels familiar:
If most of these feel familiar, integrated dual diagnosis treatment is likely the right fit.
Speak With AdmissionsIntegrated treatment that addresses both conditions together produces better outcomes than treating them one after the other. Four steps, one team.
A full medical, psychiatric, and substance-use history, including mood tracking that helps separate alcohol-induced depression from primary depression. Both conditions are documented in one integrated chart.
One plan covers both conditions, built and managed by the same clinical team rather than split between providers who never talk. The plan is matched to clinical need, not a fixed schedule.
CBT, DBT, motivational interviewing, and behavioral activation, paired with medication management when indicated. Behavioral activation rebuilds engagement with rewarding activities, which lifts mood and reduces cravings at the same time.
Skills, ongoing therapy, and an alumni connection that protect both your sobriety and your mood after you step down. Mood monitoring and medication follow-up continue through continuing care.
A quiz can’t diagnose you, but if your results gave you pause, that feeling is worth taking seriously. Reaching out doesn’t commit you to anything but a conversation.
Chief Clinical Officer, Radix Recovery
Therapy does the foundational work. Behavioral activation is especially useful here because it rebuilds engagement with rewarding, healthy activities, which lifts mood and reduces cravings at the same time. CBT helps you recognize and change the thought patterns that drive both the low mood and the using. DBT builds distress-tolerance and emotion-regulation skills for the hardest moments.
On medication, our psychiatric providers manage antidepressants and adjust them as your body stabilizes in sobriety. Tap each group to see what we use and why.
Behavioral Activation
Especially effective for co-occurring depression because it rebuilds engagement with rewarding, healthy activities, which lifts mood and reduces cravings at the same time. It is the foundational therapy on this page, paired with CBT and DBT.
CBT and DBT
CBT helps you recognize and change the thought patterns that drive both the low mood and the using. DBT builds distress-tolerance and emotion-regulation skills for the hardest moments. Motivational interviewing supports the work throughout.
SSRIs and SNRIs
Our psychiatric providers manage antidepressants such as SSRIs and SNRIs when primary depression is present, and adjust them as your body stabilizes in sobriety. Combining an antidepressant with medication for the substance use disorder can improve outcomes.
Medication-Assisted Treatment
For the addiction side, our medication-assisted treatment uses Suboxone and Vivitrol where clinically appropriate, integrated with the depression care plan rather than managed separately.
Medications we are cautious with
As a matter of safety in this population, we avoid as-needed sedatives with misuse potential for mood or sleep, in line with NIAAA guidance, and reserve those medications strictly for medically managed withdrawal.
Three program options sit within our full continuum, each matched to clinical need rather than a fixed schedule. Tap each card to see what it includes.
When depression and addiction are treated together, recovery holds. Our admissions team is here whenever you are ready, day or night.
The integrated dual diagnosis pathway runs as the through-line across every level of care, with mood monitoring and medication follow-up at each step.
Stabilization with around-the-clock monitoring through withdrawal.
Daily therapy and integrated depression and addiction care.
The most structured outpatient option, with off-site living.
Structured around work and family, same clinical team.
Relapse prevention, mood monitoring, and medication follow-up.
Peer connection that protects both sobriety and mood.
Families carry a heavy load when depression and addiction overlap, and they are part of recovery.
Understand how the two conditions interact, so support replaces blame. Families learn what depression with addiction looks like and how to respond.
Repair communication and rebuild trust with clinical guidance, in sessions designed for the relationship damage that depression and addiction create.
Practical steps to make home a place that protects both sobriety and mood, built with the family before discharge.
Radix Recovery serves residents from across Iowa, including Iowa City, Des Moines, Davenport, Waterloo, Dubuque, and the Quad Cities. Our admissions team coordinates travel and logistics, and treatment outside your home city can help by creating distance from the people and places tied to using.
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Radix is a listed treatment provider on Your Life Iowa, the official addiction-help resource run by the Iowa Department of Health & Human Services.
Across the Radix clinical leadership team, from the founding partners to the chief clinical officer.
Across client reviews of admissions, counseling, detox, and residential care.
The national standard for safety, treatment quality, and staff training in healthcare.
Radix is a listed treatment provider on Your Life Iowa, the official addiction-help resource run by the Iowa Department of Health & Human Services.
Across the Radix clinical leadership team, from the founding partners to the chief clinical officer.
Across client reviews of admissions, counseling, detox, and residential care.
The national standard for safety, treatment quality, and staff training in healthcare.
Independently verifies that Radix meets legal, safety, and ethical standards for addiction treatment.
Dual diagnosis treatment addresses a mental health condition and a substance use disorder at the same time, with one clinical team and one coordinated plan. For depression and addiction, that means your therapy, psychiatric care, and medication are managed together rather than split between separate providers. Integrated care like this produces better outcomes than treating the two conditions one after the other, because each condition feeds the other.
It can go either way, and the cause matters less than treating both. Depression can lead someone to use substances for relief, and heavy substance use can trigger or deepen depression. The relationship is bidirectional. At Radix we do not get stuck on which came first. We assess both, track your mood through early sobriety, and treat whatever is driving the cycle.
Both happen. Heavy alcohol use can cause depression that often lifts within weeks of sustained sobriety, called alcohol-induced depression. Primary major depression persists even after the substance is gone and needs treatment in its own right. Telling them apart takes a careful assessment and time in early recovery. Our clinicians track your mood before settling the diagnosis, then build the plan around what they find.
Behavioral activation, cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), dialectical behavior therapy (DBT), and motivational interviewing are core to our approach. Behavioral activation is especially effective because it rebuilds engagement with healthy, rewarding activities, which lifts mood and reduces cravings at the same time. CBT changes the thought patterns behind both conditions, and DBT builds skills for the hardest moments. Therapy is paired with medication management when it is needed.
Yes, when they are clinically appropriate. Our psychiatric providers manage antidepressants such as SSRIs and SNRIs for primary depression and adjust them as your body stabilizes in sobriety. Combining an antidepressant with medication for the substance use disorder can improve outcomes. For safety in this population, we avoid as-needed sedatives with misuse potential and reserve those strictly for medically managed withdrawal.
Co-occurring depression and substance use carry a higher risk of suicidal thoughts than either alone, and early sobriety is a vulnerable window. Residents are monitored around the clock during detox, screened regularly for suicidal thinking, and supported by a team trained to respond. Safety planning is built in from day one. If you are in crisis right now, call or text 988, then call us at (319) 270-2890.
It depends on the severity of both conditions and how your depression responds once substances are gone. Many residents follow a structured 30, 60, or 90-day pathway, then step down through PHP, IOP, and outpatient care. Because depression can take time to lift in early sobriety, the plan is matched to clinical need rather than a fixed schedule, and your mood is monitored throughout.
Yes. We serve residents from across Iowa, including Iowa City, Des Moines, Davenport, Waterloo, Dubuque, and the Quad Cities. Our admissions team coordinates travel and logistics, and treatment outside your home city can help by creating distance from the people and places tied to using. Call (319) 270-2890 to talk through the details for your situation.
When depression and addiction are treated together, recovery holds. Our admissions team is here whenever you are ready, day or night.
Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA)
National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA)
National Institutes of Health, PubMed Central (NIH PMC)
Psychiatry Online (American Psychiatric Association, FOCUS)