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Spravato (Esketamine) in Scottsboro, Alabama

Compare 2 Spravato (Esketamine) clinics in Scottsboro, Alabama that offer care for treatment-resistant depression and major depressive disorder. Review services, ratings, and contact details to find the right provider near you.
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Clinics

2 clinics shown

  • Mountain Lakes Behavioral Healthcare

    Mountain Lakes Behavioral Healthcare operates a mental health clinic in Scottsboro, serving residents of northeastern Alabama from a facility on Highway 35. The practice provides outpatient psychiatric services including evaluations and medication management for adults with mood disorders, anxiety, and related conditions. Specific procedural treatments such as TMS or esketamine are not detailed in available information; patients requiring those interventions should contact the clinic to confirm current service offerings.

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  • Premier Medical Clinic

    Premier Medical Clinic operates a multi-specialty practice on Harley Street in Scottsboro, offering psychiatric services alongside cardiology, family medicine, internal medicine, pediatrics, and dermatology. The clinic provides psychiatric evaluations and medication management as part of its broader outpatient medical services. Patients seeking specialized treatments such as TMS, esketamine, or ketamine therapy should contact the practice directly to confirm whether these modalities are available, as current listing information does not specify procedural mental health treatments beyond standard psychiatric care.

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About Spravato (Esketamine)

Spravato is the brand name for esketamine, an FDA-approved nasal spray for treatment-resistant depression and major depressive disorder with suicidal ideation. It's derived from ketamine and works on the brain's glutamate system — a different mechanism than traditional antidepressants like SSRIs.

Treatment is administered only at REMS-certified clinics under direct medical supervision. Patients self-administer the spray under a clinician's guidance, then remain at the clinic for at least two hours of monitoring after each dose. The induction phase typically involves twice-weekly sessions for four weeks, followed by weekly or biweekly maintenance dosing depending on response.

Many patients report meaningful symptom improvement within the first one to two weeks — substantially faster than the 4 to 8 weeks typical of oral antidepressants. Spravato is taken alongside an oral antidepressant, not as a replacement.

The most common side effects are dissociation, dizziness, sedation, and elevated blood pressure during and shortly after dosing. These typically resolve within the two-hour monitoring window. Patients cannot drive on the day of treatment.

Most commercial insurance and Medicare cover Spravato for treatment-resistant depression with prior authorization. Clinics offering Spravato in our directory hold active REMS certification and are staffed to provide the required in-clinic monitoring period.