Adjustment Disorders

ByJohn W. Barnhill, MD, New York-Presbyterian Hospital
Reviewed/Revised Modified Apr 2026
v39683137
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Adjustment disorders involve emotional and/or behavioral symptoms in response to an identifiable stressor.

Adjustment disorders are common and are present in an estimated 5 to 20% of people who show up for outpatient mental health visits.

The stressor that provokes an adjustment disorder may be a single, discrete event (for example, losing a job); multiple events (for example, financial hardship followed by a romantic setback); or an ongoing set of problems (for example, caring for a disabled family member). The stressor may have an impact on just one person, an entire family, or a large group of people. The stressor may even be a common developmental milestone that is usually regarded as good (for example, becoming a parent).

Death of a loved one can be a precipitant of an adjustment disorder. However, clinicians must take into account the wide variety of grief reactions considered typical in different cultures and diagnose a disorder only if the bereavement response is beyond what is expected or is not better categorized as prolonged grief disorder.

In evaluating a person, mental health professionals must determine whether the adjustment response is related to a particular stressor. They must also determine whether the response causes the person marked distress or impairs that person's ability to function in social settings, on the job, and/or in other areas.

Symptoms and Signs of Adjustment Disorder

Symptoms of an adjustment disorder typically begin shortly after the stressful event and do not continue beyond 6 months after the stressor has stopped. 

There are many manifestations of an adjustment disorder, common ones include

Most people present with a mixture of these symptoms, but some may present with only 1 especially prominent symptom (for example, feeling nervous and jittery after a physical assault).

There also is an increased risk of suicide attempts and completed suicide.

Diagnosis of Adjustment Disorder

  • A doctor's evaluation, based on standard psychiatric diagnostic criteria

For a diagnosis of adjustment disorder, people must have

  • Emotional or behavioral symptoms within 3 months of having been exposed to a stressor, and these symptoms must not continue for more than 6 months after the stressful event has happened or ended.

Symptoms must be clinically significant as shown by 1 or more of the following:

  • Marked distress that is out of proportion to the stressor (taking cultural and other factors into consideration)

  • The symptoms significantly impair social or occupational functioning

Adjustment disorders frequently occur with other mental health disorders such as obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), a personality disorder, or bipolar disorder.

Treatment of Adjustment Disorder

  • Self-care

  • Sometimes psychotherapy

  • Sometimes medications to treat certain symptoms

Adjustment disorders must be thoroughly evaluated and treated. However, there is only limited evidence supporting any particular treatment for adjustment disorders. A wide variety of individual and group psychotherapies, including brief psychotherapy, cognitive-behavioral therapy, and supportive psychotherapy, have been used successfully (see Treatment of Mental Illness: Psychotherapy). It is not uncommon for therapy to target a specific issue, such as grief. 

Interventions are much more likely to be helpful if the person with the adjustment disorder is made to feel safe and is able to provide consistent self-care. Living within an intact family, being part of a healthy social system, and/or having a trauma-sensitive psychotherapist all assist in recovery. People usually recover from an adjustment disorder with time and the help of friends and family.

Medications are often used to treat symptoms such as insomnia, anxiety, and depression.

Self-care

Self-care is crucial during and after a crisis or trauma. Self-care includes attention to personal safety, physical health, mindfulness, and maintenance, when feasible, of a daily schedule and community involvement.

Psychotherapy

There is limited evidence that psychotherapy is an effective treatment for adjustment disorders. When it is used, psychotherapy can address adjustment disorders in a general way or be used to target specific elements of the disorder (for example, grief, trauma, and role transitions) for improvement.

Medications

There is also limited evidence that medications are effective in treating adjustment disorders. Certain types of antidepressants called selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) have been successfully used to treat the symptoms of adjustment disorders, but they are generally more helpful if the diagnosis is ultimately an anxiety or depressive disorder.

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