Ketamine is an approved and routinely used anesthetic/analgesic agent in Ecuadorian medical practice and is available with standard sanitary registration for medical indications (anesthesia, analgesia) and hospital use; it appears in national clinical practice and academic literature describing perioperative and analgesic use. Examples include local hospital and academic reports documenting intravenous and subanesthetic applications in surgical and pain settings. [1]Vademecum — Ketamina (product monograph) [2]Thesis — Ketamina en dosis subanestésicas, Hospital Regional II IESS.
Regulatory/coverage nuance: Ketamine’s use as an anesthetic and analgesic is part of routine hospital formularies when the product holds ARCSA sanitary registration; public procurement and inclusion in IESS hospital formularies depend on ARCSA registration and procurement processes managed through SERCOP/IESS mechanisms. Off‑label use of ketamine for psychiatric indications (e.g., treatment‑resistant depression) is practiced in some private clinics and specialist settings globally; in Ecuador this translates into limited private/institutional availability rather than broad public reimbursement. In short, ketamine: (a) is legally available for medical/anesthetic/analgesic uses with sanitary registration and hospital procurement; (b) off‑label psychiatric use may occur in private or tertiary centers but is not a widely reimbursed public mental‑health benefit and depends on institutional policies and private payment.
Regional/insurance detail: Public social security (IESS) and Ministry of Public Health purchasing require ARCSA‑registered products and standard procurement cycles for reimbursement; therefore, routine public coverage of ketamine for psychiatric indications is not established and would be decided case‑by‑case by institutions or through private payment. [3]SERCOP — ARCSA registration requirement [2]Hospital/IESS thesis on ketamine use.