Antidepressants also have the fame of having a ton of side effects, whether they work or not. Reduced libido, sexual dysfunction, weight gain, brain zaps are the most common. Not to mention that they take weeks or months to both start and stop.
I'm not at all against antidepressants, and I know several people who have been helped a lot by them. But if there are potential alternatives like ketamine and psychedelics that have lower risk of side effects (ketamine in particular is extremely safe taken in a therapeutic setting) and only need to be taken once to potentially see an immediate effect, even if the science is weak, shouldn't these at least be available for adults to try before putting them on antidepressants?
Therapeutic use for treating depression is one dose every several weeks, so there's no chance of addiction forming unless the patient decides to start using it recreationally - and even then, although some people do get mentally addicted to ketamine, it's fairly rare even among frequent users.
And my memory of reading up on this is that the current understanding of how ketamine works for treating depression is that it's something about the way the body processes & gets rid of the ketamine, it's not from the effects that the person taking it feels (unlike with psychedelics where it's the effects themselves that open up new neural pathways in the brain allowing therapy to potentially be more effective). And taking ketamine daily won't be more effective for treating depression. So I wouldn't expect many patients to go from the medical treatment to thinking "I want to start using this recreationally" (though if enough people get treated with it, of course a few people are bound to go down that path - but plenty of people already go down the path of choosing to use it for fun).
I'm not at all against antidepressants, and I know several people who have been helped a lot by them. But if there are potential alternatives like ketamine and psychedelics that have lower risk of side effects (ketamine in particular is extremely safe taken in a therapeutic setting) and only need to be taken once to potentially see an immediate effect, even if the science is weak, shouldn't these at least be available for adults to try before putting them on antidepressants?