“…To date, there have been no studies of empirically supported treatment for adopted adults. Wiley and Baden (2005) introduced adoption-sensitive counseling suggestions that built on recommendations in the literature (e.g., Grotevant, 2003;Janus, 1997;Lee, 2003;Post, 2000) and the authors' own set of best clinical practices developed from work with members of the adoption kinship network. The authors suggested that adoption-sensitive psychologists are aware of (a) their own attitudes and biases about adopted persons (e.g., relinquishment, openness in adoption, search, and reunion), being vigilant about professional and adoption-related ethics in their practice; (b) the social and cultural factors affecting adoption-triad members (e.g., race, culture, family dynamics, socioeconomic status) using the APA Multicultural Guidelines (http://www.apa.org) in their practice; (c) the political (e.g., adoption reform) and economic aspects (e.g., commercialization) and media portrayals of adoption and the effects on adopted persons throughout their life spans; (d) resources for adopted persons including community support groups, organizations, online resources, reading material, search assistance, and groups that will advocate for adopted persons (Grotevant, 2003); and (e) the seven core issues of adoption-loss, rejection, guilt and shame, grief, identity, intimacy, and mastery or control (Silverstein & Kaplan, 1988).…”