University of Kansas Health System (Medical Pavilion) – Kansas City, Kansas Ketamine Clinics

2000 Olathe Blvd. Kansas City, KS 66160-8505
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✓ Last verified: February 16, 2026 — Edited & verified by Angelica Bottaro for HealingMaps Editorial Staff

University of Kansas Health System Medical Pavilion in Kansas City, Kansas logo

Market Position: University of Kansas Health System (Medical Pavilion) is a verified ketamine provider in the City metro on HealingMaps — one of 1,473 clinics we have mapped and tracked across 3,142 U.S. counties.

Is University of Kansas Health System (Medical Pavilion) Right for You?

✓ Choose University of Kansas Health System (Medical Pavilion) if:

  • You’re seeking verified ketamine therapy in the City metro

✗ Look elsewhere if:

  • You want ketamine-assisted psychotherapy (KAP) with integrated talk therapy
  • You’re seeking ketamine for chronic pain (this clinic focuses on mental health)

University of Kansas Health System (Medical Pavilion) Ketamine Cost Calculator

How Much Will Ketamine Therapy Cost?

Estimate your out-of-pocket range based on patient-reported pricing and HealingMaps proprietary clinic data.
Estimated per session
$525–$900
Range: $450–$1,500/session
Estimated total program
$3,150–$5,400
Range: $2,700–$9,000/6-session series
Your estimate vs. national patient-reported median Based on national tracking, adjusted for Manhattan, NY market
Select a treatment type to see pricing context.

What to Expect at Your First University of Kansas Health System (Medical Pavilion) Appointment

  1. Initial intake call — Medical history review and clinical eligibility check.
  2. Medical evaluation — in-person or telehealth psychiatric assessment, vitals check, and review of current medications with the University of Kansas Health System (Medical Pavilion) clinical team.
  3. First treatment session — supervised ketamine therapy session in a private treatment room, lasting approximately 60–90 minutes. You’ll have a comfortable chair or recliner, dim lighting, and direct medical monitoring throughout.
  4. Recovery and follow-up — observation period after dosing, mood check-in with the clinical team, and scheduling your next session. Arrange for a ride home; do not drive for 24 hours after your ketamine session.

What to Ask on Your University of Kansas Health System (Medical Pavilion) Consult Call

  • How long has the University of Kansas Health System (Medical Pavilion) clinical team been delivering ketamine therapy, and what specialty training do your providers hold?
  • What’s a typical 6-session total cost at University of Kansas Health System (Medical Pavilion), and do you offer payment plans, HSA/FSA-eligible billing, or sliding-scale pricing?
  • Have you navigated BCBS Kansas City, Aetna, or Cigna Spravato authorizations — and how does your in-office REMS monitoring work?
  • What does University of Kansas Health System (Medical Pavilion) recommend for patients who don’t respond to the standard 6-session acute series?

Patient Questions about University of Kansas Health System (Medical Pavilion)

This 4-question summary covers the most common patient questions for ketamine clinics in Kansas City, Kansas. Editorial responses are HealingMaps-authored, grounded in our 2026 Ketamine Clinic Intelligence Report.

What ketamine treatments does University of Kansas Health System (Medical Pavilion) offer?

University of Kansas Health System (Medical Pavilion) offers verified ketamine therapy services in Kansas City. Specific protocols can include IV ketamine infusion, IM ketamine injection, oral troches, ketamine-assisted psychotherapy (KAP), or Spravato (FDA-approved esketamine) — verify the specific protocol mix with the clinic during your consult call. Multi-protocol practices typically offer more flexibility for matching the modality to your diagnosis and insurance coverage.

Is University of Kansas Health System (Medical Pavilion) suited for treatment-resistant depression?

Treatment-resistant depression (TRD) — typically defined as failure on two or more antidepressant trials — is the most common qualifier for ketamine therapy and the FDA-approved indication for Spravato. Patients meeting that bar are typical candidates at ketamine clinics like University of Kansas Health System (Medical Pavilion). If insurance coverage matters, ask whether they offer Spravato (insurance-covered for TRD) versus IV ketamine (typically self-pay).

Does University of Kansas Health System (Medical Pavilion) treat PTSD, anxiety, or chronic pain?

Most ketamine clinics treat PTSD and anxiety alongside depression — these three conditions account for ~46% of HealingMaps patient inquiries. Some clinics also treat chronic pain (CRPS, fibromyalgia, neuropathic pain), though pain protocols differ from mental-health protocols (longer infusion times, higher doses). Ask University of Kansas Health System (Medical Pavilion) which specific conditions they treat most often and how their protocols differ by indication.

How does University of Kansas Health System (Medical Pavilion) compare to other ketamine clinics in Kansas City, Kansas?

Compare ketamine clinics in Kansas City, Kansas on three axes: (1) protocol mix — multi-protocol clinics offer flexibility; (2) clinical lead — psychiatrist-led clinics typically include KAP integration, anesthesiologist-led clinics typically focus on infusion; (3) insurance posture — Spravato-certified providers can run insurance coverage; cash-only IV clinics cannot. University of Kansas Health System (Medical Pavilion)’s positioning on these axes determines whether it’s the right fit for your specific diagnosis and budget.

City Ketamine Market Snapshot

Sources: CDC PLACES 2023 (Wyandotte County, KS, crude prevalence) · U.S. Census ACS 5 Year · HealingMaps proprietary patient inquiry data.

  • Adult depression in Wyandotte County, KS: 17.8%
  • Frequent mental distress (14+ days per month): 17.3%
  • Adults lacking health insurance: 17.3%
  • Wyandotte County population: 167,989 · median household income $57,771
  • Recent City-area inquiries to HealingMaps: A growing stream of Kansas residents have recently contacted us seeking ketamine care

Behind this data: HealingMaps has analyzed 23,496 patient inquiries (Oct 2022 – Mar 2026), mapped 1,473 verified clinics across 3,142 counties, scraped 132 clinic pricing pages, and collected 658 practitioner survey responses. This snapshot reflects our multi-source methodology.

From the 2026 Ketamine Industry Report

Telehealth ketamine programs undercut in-clinic pricing by 40–60%, but 64.8% of surveyed patients still prefer supervised in-clinic treatment — a clear cost-vs-safety tradeoff patients should weigh before choosing an at-home program. Source: HealingMaps 2026 Ketamine Clinic Intelligence Report — drawn from 23,496 patient inquiries and 132 clinic website analyses.

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Healing Maps Editorial Staff

Healing Maps Editorial Staff

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The Healing Maps Editorial Team has decades of experience across all facets of the psychedelic industry. From assessing studies and clinic research, to working with clinician's and clinics, we help provide data-backed information to psychedelic-curious individuals across the globe.

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