Depression is one of the world’s most common yet misunderstood mental health conditions. The view that depression is simply a mood, related to weakness, or something that someone can “push through,” cannot be further from the truth. Depression is a serious medical condition with neurobiological origins that responds to evidence-based treatments. But for millions of people with depression, evidence-based treatment is never sought; instead, they use drugs or alcohol to cope. Substance abuse very commonly co-exists with depression, with the two conditions compounding each other and each making the other harder to treat.
At All In Solutions, depression treatment is integrated, individualized, and built around the full picture of what a person is dealing with — not just the most visible symptoms.
What Is Depression?
Depression is a mood disorder that involves ongoing feelings of sadness, emptiness, or hopelessness, which adversely affect day-to-day life.[1] It is different from normal sadness and grief, as these are appropriate responses to difficult circumstances, while depression is persistent and pervasive to the point that it interferes with functioning. Depression is classified as a medical condition with identifiable neurobiological mechanisms resulting from dysregulation of serotonin, dopamine, and norepinephrine systems in the brain.[2]
The most common types of depression include:
- Major Depressive Disorder (MDD) — Depressive episodes lasting more than two weeks that severely disrupt functioning, with symptoms that include persistent sadness, loss of pleasure or interest, fatigue, disrupted sleep, and thoughts of suicide or death.
- Persistent Depressive Disorder (Dysthymia) — A chronically depressed state lasting at least two years. Dysthymia may not cause as much impairment as MDD; however, it has a significant impact on quality of life over time.
- Postpartum Depression — A serious mood disorder characterized by feelings of sadness and hopelessness after childbirth that is different from “baby blues.”
- Bipolar Disorder — Characterized by cycling depressive and manic or hypomanic episodes. It cannot be treated in the same way as unipolar depression.
- Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD) — A depressive episode with an annual seasonal pattern, generally presenting in fall and winter.
Recognizing the Symptoms of Depression
Depression presents in many ways: emotionally, physically, cognitively, and behaviorally. In order to get the help needed, one must recognize the range of symptoms besides the persistent feelings of sadness.
Emotional and psychological symptoms include:
- Persistent sadness, emptiness, or hopelessness
- Loss of interest or enjoyment in things previously enjoyed
- Feelings of worthlessness and guilt, disproportionate to your situation
- Irritability, frustration, and agitation
- Thoughts of death, dying, or suicide
Physical symptoms include:
- Fatigue and lack of energy even without physical activity
- Changes in sleep patterns, including insomnia and excessive sleeping
- Changes in appetite and weight
- Psychomotor slowing — moving or speaking more slowly than usual
- Unexplained physical symptoms such as headaches or digestive issues
Cognitive symptoms include:
- Impaired ability to concentrate, remember things, or make decisions
- Slow thinking and mental fog
- Persistent negative thoughts and a distorted, pessimistic view of the future
Behavioral signs include:
- Withdrawing from family, friends, and social activities
- Declining performance at work or school
- Neglecting self-care
- Increasing isolation.

How Alcohol Impacts Depression
A very important and widely misunderstood fact regarding depression and substance use is the link between alcohol and depression. Many who drink do so to relieve their depression, and alcohol may provide temporary relief. However, it is still a central nervous system depressant, and its long-term use will ultimately worsen any depressive symptoms over time. This is because alcohol suppresses excitatory neurotransmitters, including glutamate, and reduces serotonin and dopamine — the same neurotransmitters already affected in someone with depression.[3]
As a person continues to drink regularly, the brain adapts to alcohol’s depressant effects and becomes more excitatory at baseline, creating a neurochemical environment that is more anxious and more depressed when not drinking. As a result, more alcohol is required to reach the same level of relief, and each period of sobriety brings worsened depression and anxiety that drives even further drinking.[4]
This pattern is one of the most frequently experienced dual diagnoses: substance use drives depressive symptoms, and drinking in turn creates deeper feelings of depression. To break this cycle, both issues should be treated concurrently with integrated clinical treatment — not just treating the addiction and hoping the depression resolves on its own.[5]
When to Seek Professional Help for Depression
Indications that your depression requires professional help include:
- Symptoms have been ongoing for more than two weeks
- Depression is causing significant disruption in your daily functioning
- You are having thoughts of suicide or self-harm
- You have been using alcohol or other drugs to cope with your depression
Severe depressive disorders, including major depressive episodes with significant functional impairment, suicidal ideation, or psychotic features, require a higher intensity of care than an outpatient setting can provide.
All In Solutions offers treatment programs based on the severity of each client’s depressive disorder and any co-occurring conditions, ensuring that all aspects of the client’s mental health have been appropriately addressed.
Evidence-Based Treatment Approaches for Depression
Depression is one of the most treatable mental health conditions, with many evidence-based treatment options that demonstrate positive outcomes across the full continuum of severity.
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT): CBT is one of the most extensively researched and effective treatments for major depression.[6] It addresses the distorted thought patterns — the pervasive negativity, self-criticism, and hopelessness — that are both symptoms of depression and drivers of its persistence. By identifying and challenging these thoughts and developing more accurate and adaptive thinking patterns, CBT produces durable changes in mood and functioning that outlast the treatment itself.
- Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT): DBT is very effective for clients who experience depression alongside intense emotional dysregulation and self-harm, and for clients with borderline personality disorder.[7] Skills developed in DBT include emotional regulation, distress tolerance, mindfulness, problem-solving, and interpersonal effectiveness — addressing emotional dimensions of depression that CBT alone may not reach.
- Medication Management: Antidepressant medication (SSRIs, SNRIs, etc.) is beneficial for many clients, reducing the neurobiological burden of depression and enabling fuller engagement in therapeutic treatment. All In Solutions works with clients to develop a medication management plan that appropriately treats both their depressive disorder and any co-occurring substance use.