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Compass of Hope
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Compass of Hope

11 Kimball Dr Suite 104-105, Hooksett, NH 03106, USA, 3106 Boston, NH
3.60

About this clinic

Compass of Hope, a ketamine and psychedelic-assisted therapy clinic with offices in Hooksett, Concord, and Hampton, New Hampshire, specializes in treatment-resistant depression and anxiety using ketamine protocols and Spravato (esketamine) therapy. The clinic offers both in-person and telehealth mental-health counseling alongside these evidence-based ketamine-assisted modalities, positioning pharmacological intervention within a broader therapeutic framework. Treatment plans are individualized following psychiatric evaluation, and patients receive ongoing counseling support coordinated with their ketamine or Spravato protocol. The practice focuses on patients for whom conventional antidepressant approaches have been insufficient, combining

Treatments offered

Contact information

11 Kimball Dr Suite 104-105, Hooksett, NH 03106, USA
3106 Boston, NH

Office hours

Monday – Friday
8am – 8pm
Saturday
8am – 4pm
Sunday
Closed

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Patient reviews

3.60

Based on 31 Google reviews

5 ★
4 ★
3 ★
2 ★
1 ★

I have mixed feelings about this practice. When they first opened, they were great, and I found my wonderful therapist, who I love. I also found a psychiatrist I liked too. As time went on providers kept getting changed and leaving. Turn over rate seemed high as I was given 3 different psychs in a year. I see Pamela now, who is great! Hopefully I can continue seeing her 🤞 Also, they started advertising for GLP 1/ weight loss meds/ shots in their office. Which I think is a bit odd for a therapy office, considering it’s supposed to be about healing, acceptance and self acceptance. But they have weight loss advertisements? Overall they’re nice, and if you find a great therapist with them that’s even better! Pam is a rock star. But maybe it’s not the best for for everyone’s

Carolyn Smith · January 10th, 2026

I am sharing my experience with Compass of Hope so that others seeking mental health care can make informed decisions before starting treatment here. I entered treatment in good faith and was actively engaged in therapy and medication management. Shortly after receiving new diagnoses, I sent a portal message to my therapist that began with the sentence, “Sending this so I can find it next session.” The message had already been discussed with my therapist minutes earlier and was clearly intended for future discussion, not an immediate crisis. Despite this context, law enforcement was sent to my home. Police arrived before any verifiable phone contact from the practice appears in my records. I provided the practice with my Verizon call history to confirm this timeline, yet they were unable to provide documentation showing a call attempt prior to the police being sent. This resulted in my treatment status being exposed within my household and caused distress to my young children who witnessed officers looking for their mother. What concerned me most was not just the incident itself, but how it was handled afterward. When I asked for documentation, clarification, and an explanation of how the decision was made, I was met primarily with defensive responses rather than patient-focused communication. It took multiple requests before I was even told how to obtain my records, and some documentation continues to be withheld while citing HIPAA. During this process, it became clear that the staff member involved in the escalation is married to the owner of the practice. While internal relationships are not inherently improper, the responses I received consistently focused on defending staff decisions rather than examining whether the situation could have been handled differently or with greater clinical consultation. From a patient perspective, this created the impression that protecting the organization took priority over understanding the impact on the patient. Shortly after the incident, I learned that my therapist was no longer with the practice. I received no advance notice, no transition session, and no coordinated continuity plan until hours after my scheduled appointment had already passed. This occurred just days after receiving new diagnoses, when continuity of care was especially important. I was also charged a cancellation fee after canceling an appointment due to the distress caused by the situation. Although the fee was eventually waived, the issue was never about money. My concern has always been whether patient care, clinical context, and therapeutic stability were given the same weight as internal policies. The practice has since issued a 30-day termination of my care due to a “breakdown of relationship.” During this time, I also experienced difficulty accessing the updated patient portal and scheduling medication management appointments, as my information had not transferred into the new system and I was not notified in advance. Mental health treatment requires trust, transparency, and patient-centered decision making. When decisions appear influenced by internal relationships and the patient’s experience is treated as secondary, that trust is difficult to maintain. Both my therapist and medication provider themselves were compassionate and helpful, but from my experience, the leadership and administrative handling of this situation did not reflect the level of patient-centered care I believe people should expect. I hope Compass of Hope reviews its procedures around safety escalation, documentation, communication, leadership review, and continuity of care so that future patients receive clearer, more supportive treatment.

Savannah Nemiccolo · February 19th, 2026

Pamela Rosen is amazing. I feel very comfortable talking with her and the level of knowledge and care that she has is amazing. She was able to put together a plan for me that improved my quality of day to day life. I have had many doctors and she is the only one that has actually worked for me! Would recommend her to anyone who is struggling with mental health issues!

Craig Massua · December 5th, 2025

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