Christopher L. Hunter, Ph.D., ABPP., is a clinical psychologist and head of the primary care psychology training program at the National Naval Medical Center. Specializing in primary psychological care for military personnel, he is a behavioral health consultant in two internal medicine clinics with more than 20 full-time primary care providers and 40 internal medicine residents. He is the sole primary care behavioral health consultation trainer for the Department of the Navy and trains several psychology interns a year to assess and intervene within this setting. Dr. Hunter is board certified in clinical health psychology and is a member of the Society of Behavioral Medicine, the Society of Air Force Psychologists, and the Association for Behavioral and Cognitive Therapies. In 2005 he won the Global War on Terrorism Service Medal. Dr. Christine Hunter, Ph.D., ABPP, obtained her doctoral degree in Clinical Psychology from The University of Memphis and completed her psychology internship at Wilford Hall Medical Center in 1997. She completed a Postdoctoral Fellowship in Clinical Health Psychology in 2001 and in 2005 was Board Certified in Clinical Health Psychology by the American Board of Professional Psychology. In 2005 she was awarded "Psychologist of the Year" while working in the United States Air Force Office of the Surgeon General. Following ten years in the Air Force, she began her career as a behavioral health science administrator at the National Institutes of Health, working in the National Institute for Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases. Her research interests include broad range of behavioral diabetes and obesity areas including translational research, health disparities, adherence, health care systems research, and integrated models of behavioral health in primary care. Rodger Kessler, Ph.D., ABPP, is a clinical psychologist who for the past 17 years has been doing research in the area of collaboration between primary health care and mental health care. Dr. Kessler created a five-site medical practice where behavioral health practitioners are located within medical offices so that physicians and behavioral health clinicians can deliver evidence-based, integrated medical psychological care. Dr. Kessler's current research focuses on patient compliance with psychological referral in an integrated practice, and the impact of integrated medical psychological care on medical and cost outcomes. He is board certified in health psychology, a Fellow of the American Psychological Association, the Society of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis, and the American Society of Clinical Hypnosis, and a past president of the Vermont Psychological Association. Dr. Kessler is currently research assistant professor in the Department of Family Medicine at the University of Vermont College of Medicine.