Depression treatment at Kolmac: Integrated outpatient care for depression and co-occurring conditions
If you are struggling, you are not alone, and effective treatment is available. With the right support, meaningful progress is possible.
Understanding depression as a medical condition
Depression is a recognized medical condition. It affects how a person thinks, feels, and functions, and it exists on a spectrum from mild to severe. Some people experience depression as a series of separate episodes. For others, it can be persistent and long-lasting.
Common symptoms listed by the National Institute of Mental Health include:
- Ongoing sadness or emptiness
- Loss of interest in activities once enjoyed
- Fatigue
- Difficulty concentrating
- Changes in sleep or appetite
- Feelings of hopelessness or worthlessness
When symptoms interfere with daily life at work, at home, or in relationships, it becomes less about managing and more about finding the right level of support. Evidence-based therapy and psychiatric medication management, used together or separately, can lead to meaningful improvement when care is consistent.
Depression and substance use: A common and treatable combination
Depression and substance use disorder frequently occur together, and each can influence the other. Many people turn to alcohol or other substances to cope with low mood, emotional numbness, or trouble sleeping. While this may offer temporary relief, it often worsens depression.
Prolonged substance use can change brain chemistry and daily functioning in ways that trigger or deepen depressive symptoms. This creates a cycle where each condition reinforces the other.
For people navigating both, care is most effective when it is coordinated rather than treated in isolation. Addressing depression without considering substance use leaves a key driver of symptoms unaddressed, and treating substance use without addressing depression makes progress harder to sustain. Kolmac’s dual diagnosis model treats both conditions together from the start, so progress in one area supports progress in the other.
How Kolmac treats depression
Kolmac’s outpatient approach recognizes that people cannot always step away from their lives, and that stepping away is not always required for meaningful progress. Our model provides structured yet flexible care, holding consistency while adapting to your clinical and personal context. We develop each treatment plan around your needs, your goals, and how symptoms affect your day to day life.
Evidence-based therapies (CBT, DBT)
Therapy is the foundation of care, helping patients understand patterns and apply changes in real time. Kolmac uses evidence-based approaches such as cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) and dialectical behavior therapy (DBT), delivered in both group and individual settings. Day, evening, and virtual options are available, and family education and peer support groups help strengthen understanding and support systems.
Psychiatric evaluation and medication management
Kolmac’s psychiatric providers conduct thorough evaluations and manage antidepressant medication when clinically appropriate. We use medication management as part of a thoughtful, broader treatment plan that includes therapy and skill development. For those already taking medication, care includes ongoing monitoring and adjustments so it continues to support progress.
Mental health IOP for moderate-to-severe depression
For people experiencing more significant symptoms, Kolmac’s mental health intensive outpatient program (IOP) provides a higher level of structured care than weekly therapy alone. Care includes group and individual therapy 3 to 4 days per week, 9 to 12 hours total, with evening sessions from 5:30 to 8:30 p.m. and day sessions from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. People often need this level of support when symptoms disrupt daily functioning or when they require additional structure to move forward.
Frequently asked questions
Not sure where to start? These are the questions we hear most often.
