I will share my experience so that nobody else will have to experience this place, if they heed my warning. I booked one, 1, ONE infusion over the phone. I walked in and was very confidently presented a schedule for the next 7 or so visits, which I did not ask for. I booked ONE appt. They push 6 or 7 or 8; I don't remember. I said no, that I wanted to see how the first one went. They actually scheduled these appts for me, without my consent, and put the schedule in front of me to show me the days I was to come back. Again, I said no. I went through a detailed 1 hour in-person interview with an asst psychiatrist, someone in training, I guess. Maybe this meeting is required for liability purposes, and it is the job of this person to approve the ketamine infusion based on current meds, life trauma, mental health, etc.. When I had the infusion - the nurses were very casual and not careful or caring or compassionate at all. I've had nurses who simply take my blood, or give me a vaccine act far more caring and attentive than this staff. This was my first 'psychedelic' experience so I expected more warmth, guidance. I heard the nurses and staff in the front office talking the entire time during my infusion. Loudly talking and laughing. It was disruptive to this $500+ treatment. As they say, 'set and setting' are important. In the infusion room - the art on the walls was from Walmart, maybe the couch too. Uncomfortable. If design and setting are important to you, this place offers no comfort or beauty. There is no 'after care' - nobody asking how it went, what I experienced, only a pill to help with nausea, and then sent home. I do not recommend this place. It is solely money-making and these people, the founders, are not in this business to help people, but to buy another house, or whatever they do with their disposable income. All of this experience was VERY impersonal. This ketamine experience is intense, deeply intense and the administrators of this drug must offer some sort of respect by keeping quiet in the office, and offering some amount of warmth toward patients, who might be quite desperate for some sort of help.