I don't know how many children you have with your husband, but if by "our" your are refering to my children, you would be so alone it is deafening! I choose standard medical care for them when it is needed, for all thier organ systems when they disfunciton, including their brains.
Depression and anxiety are medical issues, and school counselors do not, and should not discuss medication for children's athletes foot, let alone very real mental illness. Many medical issues do not requrie medication, sometimes you can bring your cholesterol down with diet alone, but you should seek a qualified physican to assist you anyway. People, including children have organ systems that fall under the care of medical specialties when things go wrong, and last time I checked, brains were just as much flesh and blood as the urinary tract and feet. The school is there to educate your child, and if they were exhibiting an emotional illness, the counselor has a duty to tell your that they think your child needs medical care, which is ablsolutly within thier range of practice as a school counselor. If a school counselor suggested medication instead, and tried to diagnose your child with a medical condition, report them to the liscensing board that holds thier certificate, becasue that is inappropriate.
A board certified child psychiatrist may very well suggest therapy prior to, or in combination with, medication when it is called for. If the school nurse called you, and said, your child is not able to keep from wetting himself at school, and I think he may need some kind of medical care, would you be upset? Would you say, gee, I don't think we should medicate "our" children when they pee themselves, becasuse, shouldn't we try potty training or diapers first? I think not. If you want to see if you have an unreasonable thought process about mental illness, instert "pee" everytime you speak of the behavoir associated with mental illness, and you will see just how sad an anti medication at all costs bias is for a person who has a medical condition that could be helped. Peeing is something that is "behavioral" it is both voluntary and involuntary, under our control most of the time, and yet, we can be completely without the capcity to make it right by thinking about it...no person, if truly mentally ill, even with a temporary illness caused by circumstance, can thing away a chemical imbalance or pull thier seratonin or norepepherine levels up to a normal level by just trying harder. Sometimes, a medical intervention is needed when our normal emotions cause an atypical reaction or distrubance.
On another note, get your son to a psychiatrist and into therapy if he has had a traumatic loss that is effecting him to such a degree that he is in need of school intervention for an emotional issue. That is a sign that he may very well benefit from professional care, and I would no more tell you want that is than the school counselor should have, but just because she said something that offended you along the way, it does not necessarily mean that she may not be right about his need to see someone who could help him feel better, and that would be a psychiatrist. Maybe he only needs a "diet" (therapy) for his cholesterol to keep from peeing himself? You just don't know what he needs, but even those people who piss you off can be right about what your next move should be.
M.