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Jackson, NJ · Ocean County

Ketamine Therapy for Depression in Jackson, NJ

At-home ketamine therapy for depression for Jackson-area residents across Ocean 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.

Depression — what we treat

  • Persistent low mood lasting weeks to months
  • Loss of interest in previously enjoyed activities (anhedonia)
  • Sleep disturbance (insomnia or hypersomnia)
  • Energy loss, fatigue out of proportion to activity
  • Difficulty concentrating or making decisions
  • Feelings of worthlessness or excessive guilt
  • Recurrent thoughts of death or self-harm

How ketamine works for depression

Standard antidepressants work through monoamine systems (serotonin, norepinephrine, dopamine) and take weeks to months to produce mood improvement. Ketamine works on the glutamate system via NMDA receptor modulation, triggering a downstream cascade that increases synaptic plasticity and BDNF expression. The clinically observable effect is rapid — many patients describe meaningful mood improvement within hours to days, compared to the 4-8 week lag with SSRIs. The FDA designated ketamine's nasal-spray cousin (esketamine, Spravato) as a Breakthrough Therapy for treatment-resistant depression in 2019.

The at-home protocol

At-home ketamine therapy for depression typically begins with an induction phase of 6-8 sessions over 4-6 weeks, then transitions to a maintenance schedule based on response. Sublingual rapid-dissolve tablets are used at home with a peer supervisor present. Doses are calibrated to the patient, starting low and adjusting based on tolerability and therapeutic response. PHQ-9 scores are tracked across the course as an objective response marker.

Who's a candidate

Patients with major depressive disorder, persistent depressive disorder, or treatment-resistant depression (defined as inadequate response to ≥2 antidepressant trials at adequate dose and duration) are candidates. Patients with bipolar depression require a stable mood-stabilizer regimen first. Patients with active psychosis, uncontrolled blood pressure, untreated substance use disorder, or pregnancy are not candidates. The eligibility intake screens all of this in detail before any prescription is issued.

Depression in New Jersey: the local picture

New Jersey has roughly 9 million residents concentrated in one of the densest metro corridors in the United States. National survey data (SAMHSA NSDUH 2022) suggests around 8% of adults experience a major depressive episode in a given year — about 720,000 New Jerseyans annually with active depression. NJ has a relatively strong psychiatric workforce in the New York metro corridor but significant shortages in South Jersey and rural areas, with HRSA-designated mental-health professional shortage areas in multiple counties. Commuter stress, high cost-of-living pressures, and finance-sector work intensity are recurring themes in the patient profiles served by at-home ketamine therapy in New Jersey.

Ketamine therapy for Jackson (Ocean County) residents

Jackson Township is an Ocean County suburb with a substantial Orthodox Jewish community that has grown rapidly over the past decade, alongside a long-standing diverse working population. Cultural and religious considerations around mental health care create distinct treatment-access patterns. At-home telehealth-delivered ketamine therapy provides care that respects community privacy norms.

Treatment is delivered entirely via telehealth. Jackson-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 Ocean County.

Depression + ketamine — common questions

Is at-home ketamine therapy for depression legal in New Jersey?

Yes. New Jersey allows licensed physicians to prescribe Schedule III controlled substances via telemedicine after an initial video consultation that establishes the physician-patient relationship, per the New Jersey Telemedicine Act and consistent with federal Ryan Haight Act telemedicine exceptions. The compounded sublingual ketamine is dispensed by a licensed pharmacy and shipped to the patient's home. This is established practice in New Jersey.

How fast does ketamine therapy work for depression?

Many patients describe meaningful mood improvement within hours to days of the first session, with continued gains over the 6-8 session induction phase. This is fundamentally different from SSRIs, which typically require 4-8 weeks before any benefit appears. The rapid onset is one of the main reasons ketamine is studied for depression that hasn't responded to traditional medications.

Will I have to stop my antidepressant to do ketamine therapy?

No, in most cases. SSRIs, SNRIs, and most other antidepressants are considered compatible with at-home ketamine therapy and continue throughout treatment. Benzodiazepines and certain other medications may require timing adjustments around sessions. Every intake includes a complete medication review before prescribing.

How long does the antidepressant effect of ketamine last?

After the induction series, individual responses vary widely. Some patients maintain benefit with monthly or every-other-month maintenance sessions; others sustain remission for longer periods between sessions. The maintenance schedule is calibrated to each patient based on their response curve and PHQ-9 trajectory.

Depression 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.