Co-Occurring Mental Health Treatment

Evidence-based care and personalized therapy for long-term well-being.

About Co-Occurring Mental Health Treatment

Our Co-Occurring Mental Health Treatment program is designed to help individuals build resilience, manage symptoms, and improve daily functioning. Using evidence-based therapies and compassionate guidance, our team tailors each plan to support your unique needs and goals.

What to Expect

Clients receive a personalized treatment plan developed by licensed clinicians. Sessions may include cognitive behavioral therapy, mindfulness practices, and holistic techniques focused on long-term recovery and emotional growth.

Who Can Benefit from Co-Occurring Mental Health Treatment

Our program is ideal for individuals experiencing:

  • Anxiety and depression
  • Relationship challenges
  • Life transitions
  • Stress and burnout
  • Difficulty regulating emotions


What Sets Us apart

Yoga, Soundbath & Breathworks

Massage Therapy

Nutritionist

2 To 1 Staff Client Ratio

Morning Movement

Our clinical approach

We offer a range of services tailored to meet unique needs at every stage of the healing journey.

CBT & DBT

Evidence-based therapy grounded in skill-building, emotional regulation, and personalized treatment goals through supportive one-on-one sessions.

Psychoeducation

Collaborative group learning that helps individuals understand their symptoms, build insight, and strengthen connections through shared experiences.

Medication Management

Comprehensive support that pairs clinical expertise with ongoing communication to help individuals and families make informed, confident decisions about medications.

Mindfulness & Distress Tolerance

Collaborative group learning that helps individuals understand their symptoms, build insight, and strengthen connections through shared experiences.

CBT & DBT
Evidence-based therapy grounded in skill-building, emotional regulation, and personalized treatment goals through supportive one-on-one sessions.
Learn More
Psychoeducation
Collaborative group learning that helps individuals understand their symptoms, build insight, and strengthen connections through shared experiences.
Learn More
Medication Management
Comprehensive support that pairs clinical expertise with ongoing communication to help individuals and families make informed, confident decisions about medications.
Learn More
Mindfulness & Distress Tolerance
Collaborative group learning that helps individuals understand their symptoms, build insight, and strengthen connections through shared experiences.
Learn More

Support for Loved Ones

At Anchored Healing Center, family involvement is a vital part of the recovery process. We provide regular clinical updates so loved ones stay informed about progress and treatment goals, along with family therapy sessions to strengthen communication and establish healthy boundaries. We also include families in aftercare planning to ensure a smooth transition into continued outpatient care. Our goal is to help loved ones feel informed, prepared, and confidently supported every step of the way.

Co-Occurring Mental Health Treatment

Sarah spent three years in therapy for anxiety. She learned breathing techniques and practical cognitive restructuring and was genuinely committed to her recovery. Yet something kept pulling her backward. Even as her anxiety improved, a persistent heaviness remained. She would cancel plans, struggle to get out of bed, and feel disconnected from life in ways that didn’t fit neatly into her anxiety diagnosis.

It wasn’t until a new clinician recognized the underlying depression that things began making sense. The anxiety had been treated in isolation, but it never existed alone. The depression feeding her anxious thoughts went unaddressed, ensuring that progress remained partial and fragile.

Families watching loved ones struggle often experience similar confusion. Symptoms seem to shift and overlap. One week looks like depression, the following presents as panic. The treatment that should be working doesn’t produce the expected results. The picture refuses to come into focus because multiple conditions are being treated as a single condition.

At Anchored Healing Center, our co-occurring mental health treatment program recognizes that conditions seldom exist in isolation. Our integrated approach addresses the full complexity of each individual’s presentation, treating interconnected conditions together rather than in fragments.

What Co-Occurring Disorders Are

Co-occurring disorders, also called dual diagnosis or comorbidity, describe the presence of two or more mental health conditions simultaneously. This pattern is widespread, more the rule than the exception in clinical populations.

Common pairings

Certain combinations appear with particular frequency. Anxiety and depression are perhaps the most common pairing, with research suggesting that 60% of individuals with anxiety disorders also experience depression. The conditions share neurobiological underpinnings and often emerge from similar vulnerabilities.

PTSD (post-traumatic stress disorder) frequently co-occurs with mood disorders, anxiety disorders, and substance use disorders. Trauma’s wide-ranging effects on brain function and emotional regulation create susceptibility to multiple psychiatric presentations. Bipolar disorder commonly pairs with anxiety disorders, with some studies finding co-occurrence rates exceeding 50%.

Personality disorders, especially borderline personality disorder, frequently present alongside mood and anxiety conditions. Eating disorders commonly co-occur with depression, anxiety, and trauma-related conditions. The combinations are numerous because mental health conditions share overlapping risk factors, neurobiological mechanisms, and developmental pathways.

Why symptoms overlap

Symptom overlap between conditions creates diagnostic complexity. Sleep disturbance appears in depression, anxiety, PTSD, and bipolar disorder. Concentration difficulties characterize depression, anxiety, ADHD (attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder), and trauma responses. Irritability crosses diagnostic boundaries freely. 

This overlap partly reflects shared underlying mechanisms. Dysregulation of stress response systems, neurotransmitter imbalances, and altered brain circuit function contribute to multiple conditions. When the same biological systems malfunction, similar symptoms emerge regardless of the specific diagnosis. 

Overlap also occurs because conditions influence each other. Chronic anxiety depletes emotional resources, creating vulnerability to depression. Trauma generates both fear-based and mood symptoms. Untreated depression amplifies anxiety sensitivity. The conditions become intertwined, with boundaries blurring over time.

Why Integrated Treatment Matters

Recognizing co-occurring conditions matters only if treatment responds accordingly. Fragmented approaches that address conditions separately consistently underperform integrated models.

How treating one issue alone can fail

When only one condition receives attention, the untreated condition undermines progress. Someone treated for depression but not underlying trauma may find that mood improves temporarily, only to collapse when trauma symptoms resurface. Anxiety treatment without addressing co-occurring depression often produces partial results, as the depressive cognitions continue fueling anxious thoughts.

This pattern explains why some people cycle through multiple treatment attempts without lasting improvement. Each episode addresses part of the picture. Symptoms improve in one domain while persisting or worsening in another. The person concludes that treatment doesn’t work for them, when actually, treatment was never comprehensive enough. 

Importance of unified clinical planning

Integrated treatment coordinates interventions across all presenting conditions. A single treatment team understands the complete diagnostic picture and develops cohesive plans that address the interconnections. Interventions for one condition complement rather than conflict with therapies for another.

The unified approach allows clinicians to identify which symptoms belong to which conditions and which represent overlap. It prevents the confusion of treating depression symptoms as anxiety or missing trauma responses masked by mood symptoms. Treatment becomes strategic rather than reactive.

Clinical Modalities for Co-Occurring Disorders

Our clinical programming employs evidence-based approaches effective across multiple conditions, with modifications targeting each person’s specific combination. 

CBT

The transdiagnostic elements of cognitive behavioral therapy make it particularly suited to co-occurring conditions. The core model, which posits that thoughts, emotions, and behaviors interact in maintaining psychopathology, applies regardless of the diagnosis.

In co-occurring presentations, CBT identifies cognitive patterns that contribute to multiple conditions simultaneously. Catastrophic thinking might fuel both anxiety and depressive hopelessness. Avoidant behaviors might maintain both trauma responses and social anxiety. Addressing these shared maintenance factors produces improvements across diagnostic boundaries.

DBT

Dialectical behavior therapy offers skills applicable to emotional dysregulation regardless of its diagnostic context. The 4 skill modules – mindfulness, distress tolerance, emotional regulation, and interpersonal effectiveness – address difficulties common across conditions.

For complex presentations involving intense emotional reactivity, DBT provides a foundation of stability. Before deeper processing of trauma or targeted treatment of specific symptoms, individuals need the capacity to tolerate distress without decompensation. DBT builds this foundation while simultaneously addressing mood and anxiety symptoms.

Psychoeducation

Developing an awareness of how conditions interact empowers people to recognize patterns in their own experience. Psychoeducation explains why symptoms overlap, how conditions influence each other, and why integrated treatment matters.

This knowledge reduces the confusion that often accompanies complex presentations. When individuals understand that their shifting symptoms reflect multiple interacting conditions rather than treatment failure or personal inadequacy, engagement improves. They become collaborative partners in dealing with diagnostic complexity.

Holistic Therapies Supporting the Whole Person

Clinical interventions address specific conditions while holistic therapies support overall well-being and nervous system regulation underlying all mental health.

Yoga

Yoga’s benefits span diagnostic categories. The practice reduces anxiety through parasympathetic activation, improves mood through movement and mindfulness, and supports trauma recovery by rebuilding the body-mind connection. 

For individuals with multiple conditions, yoga provides an intervention that affects all at once. Rather than targeting one diagnosis, the practice supports the integrated human being experiencing various challenges.

Breathwork

Breathing practices influence emotional regulation systems relevant to anxiety, depression, and trauma alike. Activation of parasympathetic response through specific techniques calms anxious arousal, lifts depressed mood, and settles trauma-activated nervous systems.

Regular breathwork builds self-regulation capacity that applies whenever symptoms arise, regardless of which condition triggers them. This transdiagnostic utility makes breathwork especially valuable for complex presentations.

Nutrition

Nutritional status influences mental health through pathways affecting multiple conditions. Inflammation contributes to depression, anxiety, and trauma symptom severity. Blood sugar instability affects mood and anxiety. Gut health impacts brain function broadly. 

Our nutrition programming supports mental health across diagnostic categories. Anti-inflammatory eating patterns, stable blood sugar maintenance, and gut-supportive choices create biological foundations for recovery from mental health conditions.

Grounding practices

Grounding techniques focus awareness in present-moment experience, interrupting rumination, worry, and dissociation. Depression pulls attention toward past losses, anxiety toward future threats, and trauma toward past dangers or hypervigilant scanning. Grounding provides an alternative to all these patterns.

These simple practices offer immediate relief regardless of which symptoms are prominent in the moment. Their transdiagnostic utility makes them invaluable tools for those dealing with complex presentations.

Who This Program Is For

Our co-occurring disorders program serves adults with overlapping diagnoses and complex clinical needs that haven’t responded adequately to treatment addressing single conditions.

If you’ve been treated for one condition while another seemed to undermine progress, integrated treatment may provide what’s been missing. If your symptoms seem to shift between presentations or don’t fit neatly into any single category, comprehensive assessment and unified treatment planning can bring clarity.

This program particularly benefits those whose complexity has frustrated previous treatment attempts. When the standard approach of treating one diagnosis at a time hasn’t worked, our integrated model offers a different path.

Find Comprehensive Care at Anchored Healing Center

Mental health conditions seldom present in isolation, and treatment shouldn’t either. At Anchored Healing Center, our co-occurring mental health treatment program addresses the full complexity of your experience through integrated clinical and holistic approaches.

You deserve care that sees the whole picture, not just fragments addressed one at a time. Contact Anchored Healing Center today to learn how our comprehensive approach can support your complete recovery.

Take the First Step Today

Contact our admissions team to get started with personalized care.

HaveQuestions?

Anchored Healing provides residential treatment for both acute and sub-acute mental health conditions. Our clinical team is equipped to treat:

  • Depression and major mood disorders
  • Anxiety, panic disorder, and generalized anxiety
  • PTSD and trauma-related disorders
  • Bipolar disorder
  • Personality disorders, including BPD
  • OCD
  • Emotional dysregulation, chronic stress, and behavioral patterns linked to mental health issues
  • Co-occurring disorders where multiple symptoms overlap
  • Grief and loss–related distress
    • Complicated grief or bereavement that affects emotional stability and daily functioning.
  • Schizophrenia and psychotic spectrum disorders
    • Compassionate stabilization and treatment for individuals experiencing hallucinations, delusions, disorganized thinking, or early-onset psychosis.
  • Self-harm behaviors
    • Support for clients struggling with urges or patterns of self-injury, with an emphasis on emotional regulation, safety planning, and skills-based interventions.
  • Suicidal ideation (passive or active)
    • Comprehensive assessment, safety monitoring, and evidence-based therapeutic approaches for individuals experiencing thoughts of suicide or hopelessness.

Upon admission, every client receives a full psychiatric evaluation, a medication review, and a customized treatment plan that includes evidence-based therapies and holistic healing modalities. This ensures each person receives the level of care necessary for emotional stabilization and long-term recovery.

Anchored Healing is intentionally designed as a small, intimate six-bed program with a 2:1 staff-to-client ratio. This allows our team to provide individualized attention, strong clinical oversight, and a healing environment that supports deep emotional work.

Anchored Healing stands out for several reasons:

Dual-Approach Treatment Philosophy:
Our program blends clinical expertise (psychiatry, CBT, DBT, psychoeducation) with a comprehensive healing model (yoga, breathwork, grounding practices, art therapy, sound bath, and nature-based therapies).

Highly Credentialed Team:
All groups are facilitated by licensed professionals, including LCSWs, LMFTs, AMFTs, ACSWs, CADCs, LVNs, and our psychiatrist.

Holistic Services:

  • Weekly sessions with a nutritionist
  • Yoga, sound bath, and breathwork two times per week
  • Monthly massage therapy
  • Expressive and experiential therapies
  • Grounding sessions

Active Lifestyle Program:
Clients participate in weekly outings that promote movement, social connection, confidence-building, and exposure to real-life experiences in a structured, therapeutic way.

Anchored Healing offers a balanced environment that feels clinically strong yet emotionally supportive and retreat-like.

Each day is structured to support emotional, cognitive, and physical wellbeing. While schedules may vary, a typical day includes:

Morning:

  • Breakfast and medication support
  • Mindfulness or grounding practice
  • CBT, DBT, or psychoeducation group
  • Individual therapy or psychiatric session

Afternoon:

  • DBT Distress Tolerance
  • Art Therapy or Grounding
  • Weekly nutritionist meeting
  • Yoga, breathwork, or sound bath sessions
  • Recreational or integration time

Evening:

  • Community dinner
  • Reflective practices, journaling, or a process group
  • Structured downtime to decompress, connect with peers, and rest

This blend of therapeutic interventions and wellness practices helps clients regulate their nervous system, develop coping skills, and build a foundation for long-term healing.

Anchored Healing employs a highly qualified team dedicated to providing clinical excellence and compassionate care. Your loved one will work directly with:

  • A psychiatrist
  • Licensed therapists (LCSW, LMFT, AMFT, ACSW)
  • CADC-certified counselors
  • LVNs for medical oversight and support
  • A nutritionist (weekly)
  • Yoga, breathwork, and sound bath practitioners
  • A massage therapist (monthly)

The 2:1 staff-to-client ratio ensures that every client receives individualized attention, consistent monitoring, and ongoing therapeutic support.

Family involvement is a core component of the Anchored Healing program. We provide:

Weekly Clinical Updates:
Families receive consistent communication about progress, goals, and areas of focus.

Family Therapy:
Therapy sessions help repair communication, strengthen boundaries, and build healthy support systems.

Family Education:
Families learn how to support their loved one after discharge, understand their diagnosis, respond to emotional triggers, and maintain healthy expectations.

Aftercare Planning:
Families are included in discharge planning to ensure a smooth transition into outpatient support, therapy, psychiatry, or step-down programs.

Our goal is to help families feel informed, prepared, and supported throughout the entire treatment process.

Length of stay varies based on clinical needs and progress. Most clients participate in:

  • 30 to 45 days for stabilization and skill development
  • 60 to 90 days for deeper trauma work, emotional regulation, and long-term healing

Treatment duration is reviewed weekly to ensure clients receive neither too little nor too much care. The goal is meaningful and sustainable progress.

Anchored Healing provides a comprehensive blend of evidence-based clinical therapies and holistic healing modalities.

Clinical Therapies:

  • Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT)
  • Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT)
  • Mindfulness and Distress Tolerance groups
  • Psychoeducation
  • Psychiatric assessment and medication management
  • Trauma-informed therapy

Holistic and Experiential Therapies:

  • Yoga, breathwork, and sound bath sessions
  • Art therapy
  • Grounding exercises
  • Weekly nutritionist support
  • Monthly massage therapy
  • Movement-based healing practices

This integrated model helps clients stabilize emotionally while learning long-term skills to support mental, physical, and emotional wellbeing.

Anchored Healing offers structured weekend outings designed to help clients reconnect with life, build confidence, and experience joy in safe, supportive settings.

Common outings include:

  • Beach visits
  • Irvine Spectrum (walking, shopping, community exposure)
  • Bowling
  • Movie theater outings
  • Local hikes
  • K1 racing
  • Grooming appointments such as haircuts or barber visits

These activities support emotional regulation, social engagement, and lifestyle rebuilding.

Yes. Anchored Healing provides a safe, structured, and closely monitored environment for individuals experiencing significant emotional distress.

We ensure safety through:

  • 24/7 awake staff supervision
  • Psychiatric oversight
  • Individualized safety planning
  • Trauma-informed de-escalation support
  • Small program size with high staff-to-client ratios

If a client requires a higher level of care at any time, the clinical team will coordinate appropriate support immediately.

Aftercare is a vital part of long-term success. Every client leaves with a personalized continuing care plan developed with both the client and family.

Aftercare may include:

  • Ongoing individual therapy (CBT, DBT, EMDR, trauma-focused)
  • Continued psychiatric medication management
  • Step-down programs such as PHP or IOP
  • A weekly wellness and routine plan
  • Community support groups
  • Family communication guidelines
  • Crisis-prevention strategies

Anchored Healing remains committed to supporting clients and families beyond discharge to ensure stability, confidence, and continued progress.