I don't know that the OP was wanting to promote any of these philosophies. He could be wanting to discuss the kind of propaganda that is going on out there, or just this organization, or the claim that so many children are mentally ill.
I don't want to take my kids anywhere near a psychiatrist who believes in woke ideology. Maybe if one of my kids had some serious problem, I might consider it. But prayer would definitely be way before going to a psychiatrist. That's not someone you want to go to if you are normal, IMO.
I wouldn't want to go to a psychiatrist and get drugs to deal with emotional problems. They also use psychology. I am not totally against psychology, but I am skeptical of the usefulness of clinical psychology. What is their success rate with anything? Also, marriage counselors are not necessarily motivated to keep marriages together, at least not in the secular arena. A counselor may not share Christian values. Some of them will advise separation if it fits with their standards of what is better for the health of the whole person.
I heard a 'Christian counseling' program on the radio while driving around at night, running errands, catching part of the program before it went off the air on the occasions I heard it. It irked me that based on one party's testimony, the counselor on the air said something like, "If your husband is doing such and such that is verbally abusive" and recommended separated, or suggested other types of abuse I heard no evidence for and suggested separation. The 'verbal abuse' seemed fairly innocuous as I recall.
Maybe some Christian marriage are very helpful. But I would want to vet one if I needed one. I would want to make sure the counselor is on the same page when it comes to what a Christian marriage should look like-- submission and due benevolence are areas where a counselor might not agree with scripture, especially a secular one, but even a Christian one. And even with some pastors, you have to be careful.
I knew a fellow who had issues with drugs and porn who went to church. He was always afraid if he went to counseling the counselor might tell his wife to leave him. She could be a harsh at times and was extremely opinionated. She had cut him off from sex, maybe for a year or two. It seems to me that cutting a man off from sex could intensify his temptation to porn. But he went to see a pastor for counseling, and the pastor's reasoning was that looking with lust was adultery in the heart, so he needed to repent or she could divorce him. (I got his end of the story.) I wonder if the pastor was pro-death penalty if he believed it should be exercised for someone saying 'Thou fool' in anger. But be that as it may, the couple ended up divorcing.
I am definitely not defending his porn or drug use, but I could see how a counseling situation could have gone a very different way.
I am not saying psychology is worthless. I've read a number of academic papers in psychology journals for grad school and I have taken at least one psych seminar that I recall, and more if I count stats courses with Psych related course codes. There do seem to be some valid discoveries from the research. But as far as how that translates to actual clinical work, that is not my area, but I do not know how successful some of this stuff really is.
For marriage counseling, some secular psychologists will encourage fantasizing about someone who is not your spouse. Then there is this whole LGBT insanity. The fact that psychologists could get on board considering the literature on how messed up trans people are, the higher suicide rates for male homosexuals, and even the psychological body of literature that associates male homosexuality with men not bonding with their fathers, their getting on the LGBT train shows the lack of wisdom some of them have. Clinical psychologists have high suicide rates as well.