Ketamine Therapy in Victoria, BC
Physician-led ketamine therapy for adults with treatment-resistant depression, PTSD, severe anxiety, and certain chronic pain conditions. Care is provided by Dr. Jeff Dufresne, CCFP, MD at Synergy Health Centre in Victoria, BC.
What is ketamine therapy?
Ketamine is a medication that has been used in clinical medicine since the 1960s, primarily as a sedative and analgesic in emergency rooms, operating theatres, and field medicine. Its safety profile is well established, and it remains a standard medication in those settings today.

More recently, research has examined the use of ketamine at lower, sub-anesthetic doses for the treatment of mental health conditions and certain chronic pain conditions. The body of clinical evidence supporting these applications has grown substantially over the past decade. In British Columbia, the College of Physicians and Surgeons has issued interim guidance recognizing the use of intramuscular ketamine for mental health and chronic pain indications in regulated community settings.
Ketamine therapy at Ketamine Keys is medical treatment delivered by a physician. The medication is administered in a private clinic setting, with monitoring throughout the session and structured support before and after each treatment.
The clinic’s approach
Ketamine Keys uses the term “ketamine therapy” to describe its model of care, which combines medication with structured preparation and integration support before and after each session.
Ketamine Keys uses a higher, dissociative dose administered intramuscularly, with psychotherapy and integration work taking place outside the active treatment session. During the session itself, the focus is on the safe administration of the medication and clinical monitoring of the patient.
Patients in active integration work either continue with their existing therapist, counsellor, or psychiatrist, or are referred to a registered psychologist with substantial experience in this work.
Why intramuscular administration
Ketamine can be administered through several routes. The clinic uses intramuscular (IM) injection. This route is well-suited to a regulated community-based clinical setting and is the form recognized in the CPSBC’s interim guidance for community ketamine therapy.
Conditions in scope
The clinic provides ketamine therapy for adults whose primary condition has not responded sufficiently to first-line care. Patients may self-refer or be referred by a physician, psychiatrist, psychologist, or counsellor.
The process in detail
Care follows a four-step framework. Each step has a clinical purpose, and the process is designed to be predictable from the patient’s first contact through the integration phase.
What a treatment day looks like
Treatments are scheduled in the morning, as patients are required to fast for at least six hours before each session. Liquids are permitted up to the morning of the appointment unless otherwise instructed.
Patients arrive at Synergy Health Centre and are shown to the treatment room. A trusted person may accompany the patient to the clinic and remain in the building during the session.
After the session, the patient remains in the treatment room until fully alert and stable. A pre-arranged driver takes the patient home. Patients should not drive, operate machinery, sign legal documents, or make significant decisions for the remainder of the day. Some patients also choose not to work the following day, and this is discussed during preparation.
Regular prescription medications are generally continued on treatment day. As-needed medications such as benzodiazepines or sedatives should not be taken on the day of treatment without specific approval from Dr. Dufresne in advance. Alcohol should be avoided on the day of treatment.
The typical course of treatment
A typical course is six ketamine therapy sessions, conducted over a period of weeks at a frequency determined during the consultation. The course is designed to provide an effective initial treatment cycle, with subsequent assessment determining whether ongoing maintenance is appropriate.
Some patients respond well within the initial six-session course and require no further treatment. Others benefit from periodic booster sessions thereafter, scheduled monthly or quarterly depending on the clinical response. A separate maintenance option using nasal-spray ketamine and physician follow-up is also offered for patients whose clinical response indicates that approach is appropriate.
Outcomes vary substantially between patients. The clinic does not predict response, and there is no guarantee that ketamine therapy will produce the response the patient is hoping for. The consultation includes a frank discussion of what the evidence shows and what it does not.
Where treatment happens
Treatments are delivered at Ketamine Keys Medical Clinic, operating within Synergy Health Centre on Quadra Street in Victoria. The treatment room is private and designed for the focused, extended session that ketamine therapy requires.
3960 Quadra St #106, Victoria, BC V8X 4A3
(778) 557-2244
Fees and what's covered
Financing through third-party providers is available on request.
Initial consultation
No fee to the patient. If the assessment indicates that ketamine therapy is not appropriate, no fee is incurred. If the assessment leads to treatment, the consultation is included in the cost of the initial course.
Initial treatment course
(initial consultation plus six ketamine therapy sessions)
— $5,500
Booster treatment session
(after initial course)
— $1,250
Nasal-spray maintenance program
(one year of physician follow-ups and spray refills)
— $2,100
For Referring Professionals
Ketamine Keys works with physicians, psychiatrists, psychologists, counsellors, and other mental health professionals across Vancouver Island who see patients who have not responded to standard care.
If you are a clinician and would like to discuss whether ketamine therapy may be appropriate for one of your patients, please get in touch. A direct conversation with Dr. Dufresne is the most efficient way to determine fit.