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ADHD & Substance Use: Signs, Care, and Next Steps

About ADHD

Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) can bring daily challenges like racing thoughts, impulsivity, sleep issues, and stress that interfere with work, school, and relationships. Many people turn to alcohol or misused stimulants for relief. Instead of helping, these patterns often make symptoms worse and raise the risk of addiction.

At New Leaf Recovery, we understand the ADHD and addiction connection. Our ADHD treatment centers offer compassionate care, same-day admissions, and flexible support through in-person or Virtual IOP programs.

What Is an Anxiety Rehab Center?

An anxiety rehab center treats anxiety disorders and related substance use disorders together. Licensed clinicians coordinate care. The goal is steady relief from symptoms of anxiety and safer coping skills for everyday life.

At New Leaf Recovery, we start with a full assessment. Then we build a personalized treatment plan. Your plan can include psychotherapy (cognitive behavioral therapy, dialectical behavior therapy), group therapy, medication management, and holistic therapy for anxiety.

If substance use is part of the picture, we treat both issues together. This kind of dual diagnosis care leads to better outcomes and lowers the risk of relapse. [1]

Signs & Symptoms of Anxiety

Anxiety can show up in your thoughts, emotions, and body. [2] It can feel light one day and heavy the next.

Common mental & emotional signs

  • Worry that won’t shut off; thoughts that loop
  • Feeling on edge, irritable, or unable to focus
  • Fear in social situations (social anxiety)
  • Constant nerves about everyday tasks and plans

Physical signs

  • Fast heartbeat, tight chest, or sweaty palms
  • Tight muscles, headaches, or an upset stomach
  • Poor sleep and daytime tiredness
  • Panic attacks (sudden waves of fear with strong body sensations)

Types of anxiety

  • Generalized anxiety disorder (GAD)
  • Social anxiety disorder
  • Panic disorder
  • Specific phobias
  • OCD-related symptoms (obsessions/compulsions) can occur alongside anxiety

If anxiety is getting in the way of work, school, or relationships, professional help can make a real difference.

ADHD and Substance Use (Dual Diagnosis)

ADHD can raise the risk of substance use. [5] Impulsivity, sleep problems, and chronic stress make “quick fixes” tempting. Common patterns include alcohol to “calm down,” cannabis for sleep, and stimulant misuse to help with focus. Over time, these choices backfire. Foggy thinking, rebound anxiety, and disrupted sleep make symptoms worse.

In terms of Adderall and alcoholism, mixing stimulants with alcohol can mask intoxication, push heart rate and blood pressure higher, and increase medical risk. With ADHD and alcohol abuse, alcohol often worsens attention, sleep, and mood, which can raise relapse risk. [6]

Why integrate care? One plan. One team. Fewer contradictions. Lower relapse risk. We address attention, routines, and substance triggers together within the same program and schedule (IOP or Virtual IOP). That coordination is the core of New Leaf’s approach to co-occurring disorders, including ADHD.

What to expect from integrated dual diagnosis treatment at New Leaf:

  • Safer focus/energy tools (sleep anchors, task-chunking, simple routines) replace misuse.
  • Skills for triggers and cravings, practiced in live therapy sessions.
  • Medication management to avoid risky combinations and dosing mistakes.
  • Family education helps the home stay supportive without enabling.

Therapies We Use (Evidence-Based & Holistic)

We blend proven therapies with practical habits you can use at home. [7] We deliver a single plan and team for coordinated care across IOP and Virtual IOP.

  • Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) for ADHD: CBT is simple and practical. We map your day, tidy your setup, and swap harsh self-talk for something helpful. Big projects are broken down into small steps. You’ll learn quick tools for “I’ll do it later” and time blindness, including checklists, timers, and clear start lines, so school and work feel lighter and easier to start.
  • Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) Skills: DBT helps you pause before acting. You’ll practice calming skills to ride out frustration and lower impulsivity. We also focus on clear communication and teamwork, which are essential at home, school, and work, ensuring daily life runs smoothly.
  • Group Therapy for ADHD: Practice skills with peers, such as organization, routines, boundaries, and sleep supports. Get real-time feedback, accountability, and peer strategies that travel home. Groups are small for attention and safety.
  • Family Therapy & Psychoeducation: Set clear roles and daily routines. Reduce conflict and support individualized treatment goals. We teach practical supports without micromanaging so loved ones can help in ways that stick.
  • Medication Management: Your prescriber reviews past trials, side effects, interactions, and safe storage. We conduct regular reviews and coordinate with therapy and groups to ensure medications align with goals and the level of care. Safety checks and adjustments are built in.

What to Expect in Treatment

The pre-treatment process includes a short assessment, insurance verification, and symptom and safety evaluation to determine your correct level of care. The first priority should be to organize detox services when needed.

Treatment programs will include a series of individual therapy sessions and skills-based groups that teach CBT and DBT methods, and scheduled medication check-ins with providers. The program teaches clients to apply their knowledge through real-world activities that include creating relapse prevention plans and learning methods to handle sleep, stress, and daily activities.

Short practice plans that you can do at home between sessions will help you build on the skills you learned in treatment. The program includes optional support groups and peer connections as well as quick check-ins to monitor your progress and detect any recovery obstacles. Our organization focuses on adult services, but we work with other programs that provide adolescent support when necessary.

We deliver educational resources and support services to family members at every stage of care because we recognize that recovery affects all members of a family system.

Aftercare & Long-Term Support

Recovery continues after the program. We build a simple plan so progress sticks:

  • Step down with your therapist; keep steady routines
  • Ongoing medication management with scheduled reviews
  • Alumni, community, and peer support to stay connected
  • Tune-ups when stress rises or life changes

The goal is to achieve steadier functioning in daily life, including work, school, home, and relationships, without relying on substances to cope. We keep follow-ups and referrals easy, and coordinate with your prescriber and therapist so your plan remains right-sized and sustainable.

What Is an ADHD Treatment Center?

An ADHD treatment center treats attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder and related substance abuse together. [1] One coordinated plan. One treatment team. Licensed clinicians guide care and adjust quickly when needs change.

Your plan can include psychotherapy (CBT/DBT), group therapy, medication management, and simple wellness supports you can use at home. If co-occurring disorders are present, we use a dual diagnosis approach so that focus, routines, and substance triggers are addressed at the same time. The result is fewer contradictions and lower relapse risk. [2]

The goal is to achieve better focus, establish steadier routines, develop safer coping mechanisms, and improve overall quality of life at work, school, and home. At New Leaf, this aligns with our integrated IOP/Virtual IOP model and small, high-touch caseloads for individualized attention.

Signs & Types of ADHD

ADHD can present as predominantly inattentive, predominantly hyperactive-impulsive, or combined. [3] Symptoms often shift across the lifespan—from childhood into young adulthood and older adulthood—as responsibilities, environments, and sleep patterns change. ADHD frequently co-occurs with other mental health conditions (e.g., anxiety, depression, learning differences). [4]

Symptoms of ADHD

  • Inattention: distractible, disorganized, losing items, and having a hard time finishing tasks.
  • Impulsivity: blurting, quick decisions, risk-taking, trouble waiting.
  • Fidgeting/hyperactivity: restlessness, “on the go,” difficulty sitting still.
  • Impact areas: school/work performance, relationships, self-esteem, sleep, and time management.

Frequently Asked Questions About ADHD Treatment Centers

How does dual diagnosis care work for ADHD and addiction?

One integrated plan treats attention challenges and substance abuse together to lower relapse risk and keep care consistent.

A coordinated team manages therapy, groups, and medication management under one plan. We can adjust faster and match the right level of care.

Will I get a personalized treatment plan?

Yes. Goals, therapy mix (CBT/DBT), medications, and supports are tailored and updated often by your treatment team.

Is CBT helpful for ADHD? What about DBT?

Yes. CBT builds structure and skills. DBT strengthens emotion regulation and impulse control. We blend them in groups and individual sessions.

Are stimulants safe if I have a history of alcohol use?

We review risks, consider non-stimulants, and set a careful medication management plan with close follow-ups.

Can family members be involved?

Yes. Family therapy and education help set clear roles and calmer routines at home without micromanaging.

What if I can’t attend in person?

No problem—join IOP online. It’s the same clinicians, same groups, and same schedule, live through secure telehealth.

Start ADHD Treatment Today

Same-day admissions are often available. We’ll start with a quick pre-assessment, verify insurance, and build a plan around your goals, medications, and supports. Call our 24/7 admissions line or verify insurance to begin care at New Leaf Recovery’s ADHD treatment center today.

Sources

[1] Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD). (n.d.). National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH). https://www.nimh.nih.gov/health/topics/attention-deficit-hyperactivity-disorder-adhd

[2][7] Subodh, B., Sharma, N., & Shah, R. (2018c). Psychosocial interventions in patients with dual diagnosis. Indian Journal of Psychiatry, 60(8), 494. https://doi.org/10.4103/psychiatry.indianjpsychiatry_18_18

[3] About Attention-Deficit / Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD). (2024, October 23). Attention-Deficit / Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD). https://www.cdc.gov/adhd/about/index.html

[4] Other Concerns and Conditions with ADHD. (2024, October 22). Attention-Deficit / Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD). https://www.cdc.gov/adhd/about/other-concerns-and-conditions.html

[5] Rohner, H., Gaspar, N., Philipsen, A., & Schulze, M. (2023). Prevalence of Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) among Substance Use Disorder (SUD) Populations: Meta-Analysis. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 20(2), 1275. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20021275

[6] Treating ADHD in Patients with Alcohol Use Disorder: A Call for Concurrent care | Research | Advances in Psychiatry | NewYork-Presbyterian. (n.d.). NewYork-Presbyterian. https://www.nyp.org/advances/article/psychiatry/treating-adhd-in-patients-with-alcohol-use-disorder-a-call-for-concurrent-care