Dr. Benjamin Soffer, DO — former Chair of Internal Medicine — personally evaluates and manages every patient. This isn't a prescription mill.
Ketamine creates a window of neuroplasticity that enhances the effectiveness of therapy, EMDR, CBT, and other modalities you're already providing.
With patient consent, we share treatment updates, session notes, and outcome data so you can integrate ketamine into your overall care plan.
Required companion, AI-guided sessions with distress detection, emergency support, and regular physician follow-ups at every step.
Many patients experience meaningful improvement within hours — not weeks. Especially valuable for patients in acute distress or treatment-resistant presentations.
Sublingual ketamine works through NMDA/glutamate pathways. No respiratory depression, no opioid dependence, no benzodiazepine tolerance.
Consider referring patients who meet any of the following criteria.
Treatment-resistant depression (failed 1+ adequate SSRI/SNRI trials)
Anxiety disorders not adequately controlled by first-line medications
PTSD — especially when therapy alone hasn't been sufficient
Chronic pain with central sensitization (CRPS, fibromyalgia, neuropathic pain)
Suicidal ideation requiring rapid-acting intervention (with appropriate safety planning)
Patients motivated to combine ketamine with ongoing psychotherapy
Email drben@tovanihealth.com or call 561-468-6981. Mention you're a referring provider.
Send your patient to tovanihealth.com/eligibility. The 5-minute assessment screens for contraindications.
Dr. Soffer conducts a thorough video consultation. With patient consent, we'll coordinate with you on history and goals.
Patient begins at-home treatment. You receive progress reports and can coordinate care at any point.
Dr. Benjamin Soffer, DO — Board-certified internal medicine physician, former Chair of Internal Medicine at St. Mary's Medical Center, and Associate Professor at FAU Medical School. Licensed in Florida and New Jersey.
“I welcome collaboration with referring providers. Ketamine works best when it's part of a comprehensive treatment plan.”