Arrow Health - Detox & Rehabilitation Programs Melbourne

Struggling with addiction & seasonal depression? You’re not alone

Winter is hard for a lot of people, but for those living with both addiction and seasonal depression it can feel like being caught between two forces that each make the other worse. With neither one willing to let go first.

If that’s where you are right now, this is worth reading. What you’re experiencing has a name, it has an explanation, and most importantly it has effective treatment.

You’re not weak, you’re not beyond help, AND you’re not alone in this.

What is seasonal affective disorder (SAD)?

Seasonal Affective Disorder, commonly known as SAD, is a form of depression that follows a seasonal pattern. Typically emerging in autumn and winter and lifting in spring. It’s driven by the reduction in natural light during shorter days, which affects the brain’s regulation of serotonin and melatonin, two chemicals that play a significant role in mood, sleep, and motivation.

SAD is not the winter blues. It’s not simply feeling a bit flat or off because the weather is grey. It’s a clinically recognised mood disorder that can significantly impair daily functioning and it affects around 1 in 300 people in Australia.

Common symptoms include persistent low mood, fatigue, low energy, difficulty concentrating, changes in sleep and appetite, social withdrawal, and a loss of interest in things that normally bring pleasure.

Sound familiar? The overlap between SAD symptoms and the experience of active addiction is significant and for those caught in both it can be deeply compounding.

The relationship between SAD and addiction

The connection between seasonal depression and substance use disorder isn’t coincidental. Research consistently shows that people with mood disorders (including SAD) are at a significantly elevated risk of developing problematic relationships with alcohol or other substances.
When mood drops, energy disappears, and the motivation to engage with life fades, substances can feel like a solution. Alcohol might seem to ease the heaviness. Stimulants might temporarily restore the energy that SAD has stripped away. Other substances might numb the persistent discomfort of feeling low without knowing why.

What begins as self-medication quickly becomes its own problem. Alcoholl is a depressant, it offers short-term relief but worsens mood and disrupts sleep over time, deepening the very symptoms it seemed to soothe. The cycle that follows: using to cope, feeling worse, using more, it’s one of the most common and painful patterns we see in people seeking treatment during the winter months.

For families watching someone they love move through this cycle, winter can feel like the season where things quietly deteriorate. The isolation increases. The explanations become harder to follow. The person they know seems further away.

Why this combination requires integrated treatment

This is the critical point and one that lets a lot of people down. Treatment isn’t always designed for the full gamut of presenting problems. .

Treating addiction without addressing the underlying or co-occurring depression leaves a significant gap. If the mood disorder remains unaddressed, the emotional conditions that drove the substance use in the first place still remain. Relapse risk stays high. Recovery feels fragile.

Equally, treating depression without acknowledging the role substances are playing in maintaining, worsening, or masking symptoms means that the clinical picture is incomplete from the start.

Effective treatment for people experiencing both SAD and addiction needs to address both simultaneously. This is what integrated dual diagnosis care means in practice. Not two separate treatment tracks running parallel, but a unified clinical approach that understands how these conditions interact and treats the whole person accordingly.

What integrated treatment looks like at Arrow Health

Arrow Health’s inpatient program is designed to support people experiencing addiction alongside co-occurring mental health conditions, including seasonal depression and other mood disorders.

Within a structured residential setting, treatment includes:

Comprehensive clinical assessment on admission to identify all presenting conditions, including mood disorders that may have been masked by or attributed to substance use.

Integrated therapy combining evidence-based approaches to both addiction and mood disorder. This includes individual therapy, group work, and psychoeducation that helps people understand the relationship between their mental health and their substance use.

Psychiatric support for those requiring medication review or management as part of their mental health treatment.

A therapeutic community that reduces the isolation that feeds both SAD and addiction, replacing it with genuine human connection, peer understanding, and a structured daily rhythm that supports mood regulation and recovery simultaneously.

If winter feels heavier than it should

There is a version of this that a lot of people carry quietly for a long time. That every winter is harder than the last. That the substances help for a while, and then they don’t. Spring then arrives and things lift slightly, but never quite back to where they were, and then the following winter starts a little lower than the one before.

That pattern isn’t inevitable, it isn’t simply who you are. It’s a cycle that integrated clinical treatment is specifically designed to interrupt.

Reaching out when you’re in the middle of it, when motivation is low, when everything feels heavy, when the idea of making a phone call feels gigantic is genuinely hard. We understand this, but it’s also precisely the moment when professional support makes the most difference.

You don’t need to have it all figured out before you call. You don’t need to be certain. You just need to make one move in a different direction.

For families reading this

If you recognise the person you love while reading this, the worsening winters, the self-medication, the withdrawal the cycle that seems to reset but never quite recover, then trust your recognition.

You’re not overreacting, you’re not catastrophising, and reaching out on their behalf, or simply seeking information and support for yourself isn’t overstepping.

Arrow Health’s team works with families as well as individuals, because we understand that addiction and depression affect everyone in the orbit of the person experiencing them, and that families need support and information too, not just the person in treatment.

Taking the next step

If you or someone you love is struggling with addiction, seasonal depression, or both, Arrow Health’s integrated inpatient program provides the clinical depth and human warmth to treat the whole picture.

You don’t have to navigate this alone.

What is the link between seasonal affective disorder and addiction?

SAD and substance use disorder frequently co-occur. When mood drops significantly in winter, people may turn to alcohol or other substances to manage low energy, poor sleep, and emotional heaviness. Over time this self-medication worsens both conditions, creating a cycle that is difficult to break without integrated clinical support addressing both simultaneously.

Can addiction and seasonal depression be treated at the same time?

Yes, and treating them together produces significantly better outcomes than addressing either in isolation. Arrow Health’s inpatient program provides an integrated dual diagnosis care that assesses and treats co-occurring addiction and mental health conditions as a unified clinical picture rather than separate problems.

How do I know if what I’m experiencing is SAD of just feeling low in winter?

SAD is characterised by a consistent seasonal pattern, symptoms that emerge in autumn and winter and lift in spring, combined with significant impact on daily functioning. If you notice that your mood, energy, motivation, and substance use follow a predictable seasonal pattern that is affecting your life it’s worth speaking to a clinician. Arrow Health’s assessment process will help identify what is driving your experience and what treatment approach is most appropriate.