“…With their rich tradition of prevention (Myers, Sweeney, & Witmer, 2000), developmentalism (Ivey & Ivey, 1998, 1999, multiculturalism (Lewis & Arnold, 1998;Sue, Arredondo, & McDavis, 1992;Sue & Sue, 2002), contextualism (D'Andrea, 2000;Ivey & Ivey, 1998, 1999McAuliffe & Eriksen, 1999;Thomas, 1996), and social action (Kiselica & Robinson, 2001; Lee & Walz, 1998), professional counselors have largely eschewed more medical approaches to mental health and have generally been critical of this medicalizing trend (Breggin, 1994(Breggin, , 2001Douthit, 2001;Glasser, 2003;Ivey & Ivey, 1998, 1999. The time may be at hand, however, when it will be necessary for counselors to expand their knowledge base, both to defend their time-honored traditions and to establish a basis for deciding when attention to biopsychiatric findings may be warranted.…”