Dual Diagnosis

In many cases, certain conditions of people could push them to do certain behaviors that could also posses a problematic effect onto them most especially with their health. Somehow, substance abuse could possibly be a byproduct of a certain psychiatric disorder. An individual afflicted with an anxiety disorder could also become dependent to oxycontin, which is able to give the person a relaxing feeling. Make sense?

The term dual diagnosis is defined as the co-occurrence of a mental illness and substance-abuse problem in a person. Individuals who experience a dual diagnosis often face a wide range of psychosocial issues and may experience multiple interacting illnesses. With dual diagnosis, both illnesses may affect the person physically, psychologically, socially, and spiritually. Not only is the individual affected by two separate illnesses, both illnesses interact with one another. The illnesses may intensify each other and each disorder predisposes to relapse in the other disease. At times the symptoms can overlap and even mask each other making diagnosis and treatment more difficult.

There are a number of findings that is discovered to clarify relationships . Causality theory suggests that certain kinds of substance abuse may causally lead to mental illness. Upon studying the causes of schizophrenia, it has been found that cannabis usage could causally develop schizophrenia. Moreover, the self-medication theory suggests that people with severe mental illness misuse substances in order to reduce a specific set of symptoms and counter the side-effects of antipsychotic medication. Some studies illustrate that nicotine could be useful for decreasing motor side-effects of antipsychotics. Similarly, the alleviation of dysphoria theory suggests that people with severe mental illness commonly feels bad about themselves and that this makes them susceptible to using psychoactive substances to alleviate these feelings.

The problem with dual diagnosis is that most often, only one of the two interacting illnesses is identified. Furthermore, the patient tends to be in denial with one of the illnesses. An individual diagnosed with a mental disorder may be in denial about the drinking or substance abuse. The other way around could happen. The apparent substance abuse could mask the mental disorder. Therapists, psychiatrists, and professional counselors are having a hard time identifying both illnesses because psychiatric symptoms can be covered up by alcohol or drug use. Furthermore, alcohol or drug use, or withdrawal from alcohol or other drugs can mimic or give the appearance of some psychiatric illnesses. Also, untreated chemical addiction could contribute to a reoccurrence of psychiatric symptoms, and untreated psychiatric illness could contribute to an alcohol or drug relapse.

According to one alcoholic, specifically in America, the problem is that society- including the medical community and criminal justice system- do not accept and treat alcoholism as a real illness. Moreover, it looks like that they do not recognize how useless it is to treat one illness but not the other. Medical professionals have the tendency to prescribe antidepressants to their patients without screening them for substance abuse. The addict/alcoholic whose depression is not cured will continue to fail at the attempt to get clean and sober. Those with depression whose substance abuse is not detected will get sicker because alcohol is a depressant and with every sip they are throwing gasoline on their simmering bipolar. Consequently, it is difficult for these people to find appropriate treatment. Most substance-abuse centers do not accept people with serious psychiatric disorders and many psychiatric centers do not have the expertise with substance abuse.

Integration is the key to treat two disorders where collaborative decision-making procedure should happen between the therapy group and the patient.

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