Depression is a clinical mental health disorder characterized by extreme and prolonged sadness, lack of energy and low self-worth and can include frequent thoughts of suicide or death. Several factors contribute to the expression of this disease including your chemical make-up, your genes, your personality and your past and present environment. Fortunately, despite the numerous causes of depression, depression can be successfully treated, and most people who seek help for this disease will recover.
Treatment for depression can take many forms which can include medications, psychotherapy, electroconvulsive therapy (in rare cases) and self-treatment if you experience only very mild forms of depression. Maintaining positive overall health and diet, for example, is helpful in combating depression if you have it, but it may not fully control depression especially if you have more serious symptoms.
Self-medication through drugs or alcohol will always make your mental health diagnosis worse as well as add additional negative symptoms and health problems as a result of your substance use. Substance abuse — whether or not for self-medication — will also invite addiction. Using drugs and alcohol to cope with your depression — or any other mental health disorder — will not only aggravate your mental health symptoms but also make them harder to diagnose, delaying your treatment and prolonging your suffering.
Before your doctors can begin to treat your depression successfully, they will recommend that you first treat any substance use disorders you may have to isolate the symptoms of your mental health issues and make an accurate diagnosis. On-going substance use will exacerbate and mask your mental health symptoms and, if not directly addressed, will undermine any mental health treatment you receive as well as leave you trapped in addiction.
You or your loved ones may easily identify signs of depression. While everyone naturally experiences feelings of sadness at times — especially as a direct result of an external event, such as bereavement — symptoms of depression often do not have a link to a direct cause. These symptoms also must last at least two weeks and must not be the result of another illness before your doctor can make a diagnosis of depression. Common symptoms of depression include:
Depression differs from grief in several important ways. Depression usually includes on-going feelings of sadness, while grief will include experiences of both happiness and sadness. With depression, low self-esteem is prevalent throughout, while those grieving maintain their self-esteem during their sadness. You also may experience grief and depression simultaneously which can intensify and prolong your grieving process.
Depression and addiction can have devastating consequences on your health. Self-medicating your depression can increase not decrease the severity of your mental health, and depression can lead you to long-term drug and alcohol use and ultimately addiction. Since both depression and drug addiction have higher incidences of suicide — in addition to many other severe health-related problems — untreated depression and addiction can very likely take your life.
To combat either disease effectively, you will first need an addiction treatment plan that can help you successfully eliminate your needs for drugs and alcohol; otherwise, your addiction will eventually undermine your mental health treatment. An individualized approach to addiction recovery — one that focuses on you, your personality, your drug use habits and your triggers — can help you overcome your addiction quickly and with long-lasting results so that you can confidently focus on your mental health without addiction masking or increasing your symptoms or defeating your treatment. Since Serenity Oaks Wellness Center takes the same approach to mental health treatment as it does to addiction treatment, you can leave here confident that you will have many healthy ways to deal with all factors which have contributed to your depression and addiction.
Call Serenity Oaks Wellness Center today at 844-720-6847 for more information about how an individualized and holistic treatment plan can help you overcome your drug addiction and co-occurring depression and help you live the healthy, drug-free life that you deserve.