Transcend Therapy Services

Ketamine-Assisted Psychotherapy for Suicidal Ideation

Addressing Suicidal Ideation with Compassion & Safety

All of you is welcome here.

1 (833) 313-2512
Ava Kool
Care Cordinator

At Transcend Ketamine, many of our clients (around 75%) come in with suicidal ideation (SI) as a major, visible part of what they’re experiencing. Rather than defaulting to inpatient hospitalization, our mission is to help you feel heard, safe, and supported in the outpatient setting. We believe you can work through suicidal thoughts and live your life fully during treatment —without being locked up.

Our therapists specialize in directly addressing suicidal ideation in outpatient care. This means:

  • We create a space where you can openly discuss suicidal thoughts, feelings, and impulses.

  • You won’t be met with only “safety checklist” or “CYA” style questions — we aim for real talk, not avoidance or control.

  • Our goal is often to prevent inpatient psychiatric admission by working early, intensively, and in a therapeutic environment that balances safety with autonomy.

How Ketamine Helps with Suicidal Ideation

Ketamine isn’t just another antidepressant — it acts differently, and rapidly, in ways that are particularly helpful for suicidal ideation:

  • Ketamine has been shown to produce rapid reduction in suicidal thoughts, sometimes within 24 hours after a single IV infusion. PubMed+3PubMed+3OUP Academic+3

  • In studies, early reduction in SI after ketamine treatment is linked with substantially lower risk of suicidal behavior (suicide attempts or hospitalizations) over several months. PubMed

  • Even for people with treatment-resistant depression (TRD) and prominent suicidal ideation, ketamine infusions have been shown to be effective, safe, and tolerable. OUP Academic

Why Outpatient & KAP Make Sense Over Inpatient (When Safe to Do So)

Many individuals feel let down by inpatient care — not because it's inherently “bad,” but because the structure often emphasizes stabilization and safety over real therapeutic work. Key concerns include:

  • Inpatient settings frequently focus on managing immediate risk, but may offer less sustained therapeutic engagement or exploration of underlying causes.

  • Hospitalization can break the sense of continuity in life: jobs, family, sense of self. Coming back out can lead to a rebound of risk, especially if follow-up care is fragmented.

While inpatient care is crucial in certain high-risk moments (e.g. imminent danger, plan and means, psychosis, etc.), the American Psychiatric Association practice guidelines emphasize that not all suicidal ideation requires inpatient admission, especially when there is no plan or intent, and the individual has social support and outpatient follow‐up. American Academy of Family Physicians

Who This Might Be Right For

You may especially benefit from this approach if:

  • You’ve been experiencing suicidal ideation but haven’t had intent or plan (or the plan/intent is minimal)

  • You want to avoid or exit inpatient care, but you’re willing to engage in therapy, safety planning, and consistent follow-up

  • You feel like your suicidal thoughts are recurring, hard to speak about, or driven by underlying distress that hasn’t been addressed fully

  • You’ve tried meds, therapy, etc., with little or temporary relief
"The Transcend Team has been INCREDIBLE with our family!  They have been so caring and their knowledge of how to conduct the infusion session in tandem with the therapy session is the best approach!  My daughter has joy again."
Susannah
Therapy services:
  • Ketamine Assisted Psychotherapy
  • In-person Therapy
  • Virtual Therapy
Frequently Asked Questions.

Ketamine Infusion Therapy/Ketamine Assisted Psychotherapy is ideal for people suffering from treatment resistant depression, anxiety, suicidal ideations, OCD, PTSD and chronic pain conditions with no relief from other medications or therapeutic interventions.

Ketamine is a very short acting medication. Generally speaking, any side effect experienced from Ketamine will be short-term and will subside after the infusion has stopped. It can be normal to have slight increases in blood pressure and heart rate during an infusion. A small percentage of patients do experience some nausea during or right after the infusion. Nausea, elevated blood pressure and heart rate are easily managed through IV medications during the session should these arise. Most patients who do not eat for three hours prior to the session, and keep their eyes closed or use eyeshades during the session, will not experience any nausea.

In high doses and/or with very frequent administration Ketamine can be irritating to the bladder. For the purposes of facilitating KAP, doses of ketamine are low and most patients will only do one or two sessions per week. In this dosing and frequency there is an extremely low risk of developing bladder irritation caused by the administration of Ketamine. We have never had a patient develop bladder issues from this treatment at our clinic.

During your medical intake, we will determine if you need to alter your medication regimen prior to treatment. There are only a few medications that should be altered prior to initiating treatment. For instance, stimulant medications, benzodiazepines, and medications like Lamictal may need to be held or adjusted prior to treatment.

We request that you don't eat a meal within 3 hours of the start of your appointment time.

After receiving a ketamine infusion, it is normal to feel slightly tired or loopy for several hours. It would be unsafe to drive after a session so we do require that you arrange a family/friend to pick you up or utilize a taxi or other ride service.

It is best to provide time to fully process the therapeutic content that may have been worked through in the session. We encourage our clients to journal and integrate in the time following the session.

At Transcend, it is our goal to have this treatment be a highly transformative, short term intervention for you.

One of the reasons to undergo the KAP process with a therapist vs. receiving Ketamine infusion or injection-only is because most people are able to avoid needing maintenance treatment long-term with KAP. When symptom reduction has occurred through the chemical effects of ketamine only, there is often a need to re-administer ketamine every 20-30 days to keep symptoms at bay. With KAP, symptom reduction is more often secondary to therapeutic progress which does not dwindle in time, and therefore maintenance treatments are often not required.

The majority of our clients will reach sub-clinical levels of distress after an average of 6-10 sessions. Most of our clients will discharge from our care after these sessions and won't need any form of maintenance therapy. Some people do benefit from revisiting KAP intermittently throughout the year following the initial series as needed to continue therapeutic progress but this is not the most common treatment plan at Transcend.

For chronic pain treatment, it is more difficult to keep baseline pain levels down and flare-ups without maintenance infusions ongoing. The majority of patients with chronic pain will do sessions every 30-90 days to keep the baseline pain levels reduced.

You can expect to be at the clinic for approximately 2 hours. There are many factors that influence the length of the infusion but most patients will receive a 35-50 minute ketamine infusion. Your Ketamine Assisted Psychotherapy trained therapist and a registered nurse will be by your side throughout your entire time during the infusion. Your therapist will be with you before to help set goals for the session, during for guidance and processing, and after for continued therapy, integration, and reflection.

Have another question? Don't hesitate to reach out to us.