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Highland Park, NJ · Middlesex County

Ketamine Therapy for Anxiety in Highland Park, NJ

At-home ketamine therapy for anxiety for Highland Park-area residents across Middlesex County. Board-certified physician care, telehealth consults, sublingual rapid-dissolve tablets delivered to your door — no clinic visits.

By Dr. Ben Soffer, DO — board-certified physician, licensed in New Jersey.

Anxiety — what we treat

  • Persistent excessive worry that's hard to control
  • Physical symptoms — muscle tension, restlessness, fatigue
  • Difficulty concentrating, mind "going blank"
  • Sleep disturbance, often with anxious rumination
  • Avoidance of triggering situations
  • Panic episodes (in panic disorder)
  • Irritability that doesn't match the situation

How ketamine works for anxiety

Anxiety disorders are increasingly understood as conditions of hyperactive threat-detection circuits and impaired prefrontal regulation. Standard treatment uses SSRIs to modulate serotonin signaling, which works for many patients but not all. Ketamine's action on the glutamate system appears to restore healthier connectivity between the prefrontal cortex and the limbic system, allowing patients to step back from anxious thought patterns rather than being immersed in them. The effect on generalized anxiety is generally faster-onset than SSRIs and often felt within the first few sessions.

The at-home protocol

At-home ketamine therapy for anxiety follows a similar induction-then-maintenance arc as depression treatment, with somewhat lower starting doses for anxiety-predominant patients (since the dissociative experience itself can be anxiety-provoking if doses are too high too quickly). Doses are titrated up gradually. GAD-7 scores are tracked across the course. Benzodiazepines, if used chronically, are addressed at intake — they don't need to be stopped, but the timing of doses around sessions matters because benzos can blunt ketamine's neuroplastic effect.

Who's a candidate

Patients with generalized anxiety disorder, panic disorder, social anxiety disorder, or anxiety co-occurring with depression are candidates. Patients with active substance use, untreated psychosis, or severe uncontrolled medical conditions are not candidates. Patients with significant trauma histories may benefit but require additional pre-session preparation — the dissociative experience can surface trauma material and needs to be approached with appropriate support.

Anxiety in New Jersey: the local picture

New Jersey's commuter-dense lifestyle — particularly along the NJ Transit corridors into Manhattan — drives elevated rates of anxiety presentations in the patient populations we serve. National anxiety-disorder prevalence (NIMH / SAMHSA) is roughly 1 in 5 adults annually, and the NJ population skews toward finance, law, healthcare, and tech where work-intensity contributes to anxiety load. Wait times for psychiatric appointments in New Jersey can exceed 3 months in many regions, even for patients with full insurance coverage. At-home ketamine therapy provides a faster path for anxiety patients who have already tried SSRIs without full response.

Ketamine therapy for Highland Park (Middlesex County) residents

Highland Park Borough in Middlesex County borders New Brunswick and Rutgers University, with a substantial Orthodox Jewish community and an academic-and-research professional population. Cultural and religious considerations around mental health care vary across these communities. At-home ketamine therapy provides care that respects multiple privacy and observance norms.

Treatment is delivered entirely via telehealth. Highland Park-area patients complete an online eligibility intake, have a video consult with Dr. Soffer, and receive prescription medication via mail. Sessions take place in the patient's home with a peer supervisor present. No travel to a clinic, no in-person visits required, anywhere in Middlesex County.

Anxiety + ketamine — common questions

Will my New Jersey insurance cover at-home ketamine therapy for anxiety?

Most insurance plans in New Jersey, including Horizon BCBSNJ, Aetna, Cigna, and the major HMO/PPO networks, do not cover compounded sublingual ketamine for anxiety — it is off-label even though the clinical evidence is strong. Our $250/month pricing is cash-pay, generally cheaper than a single IV infusion at a NJ ketamine clinic. We provide superbills for HSA/FSA and out-of-network submission; approval is patient-by-patient.

Does ketamine help anxiety or just depression?

Ketamine has growing evidence for treating generalized anxiety, social anxiety, and panic disorder in addition to depression. The mechanism is somewhat different in anxiety-predominant presentations — patients often describe a reduction in the "tightness" or constant threat-monitoring quality of anxiety rather than the mood lift depression patients describe. Many patients have both conditions and notice improvement in both.

Can ketamine therapy replace my anti-anxiety medication?

It depends on the medication and the patient. SSRIs and SNRIs used for anxiety are generally continued through ketamine treatment. Benzodiazepines (Xanax, Ativan, Klonopin) used chronically can blunt ketamine's effect — patients on chronic benzos often work toward reducing dose over time, but never abruptly. Replacement decisions are individualized and coordinated with the prescribing physician.

Won't ketamine make my anxiety worse during the session?

For some anxiety-prone patients the dissociative experience itself can feel anxiety-provoking, especially at first. This is why doses are started conservatively and titrated up gradually. The protocol includes a peer supervisor present during sessions and breathing/grounding techniques for moments of in-session anxiety. Most patients adjust to the experience within the first 2-3 sessions and find it tolerable or actively pleasant.

Anxiety treatment in nearby NJ cities

Important: Compounded ketamine for anxiety, depression, PTSD, and chronic pain is not FDA approved. This page is informational. Eligibility and treatment decisions are made during a physician consultation based on your complete medical history.