Identifying traits that impact care for patients with mental illness.
In the American healthcare system, no one transcends the potential for holding preconceived attitudes鈥攏ot even those who provide the healthcare.

Jennifer McIntosh, PhD 鈥21, MS 鈥24, adjunct professor in the 成人动漫网站 College of Nursing and Public Health.
Jennifer McIntosh, PhD 鈥21, MS 鈥24, adjunct professor in the 成人动漫网站 College of Nursing and Public Health, is particularly concerned about the stigma experienced by patients with mental illness. As a nurse, educator and community advocate herself, Dr. McIntosh knows firsthand that emergency room care is some of the most demanding work available to healthcare professionals. And while emergency nurses are well prepared to care for patients with medical crises, Dr. McIntosh notes that the interventions used for patients with mental health emergencies are far less safe, thorough and empathetic.
鈥淭he reality is, with one in five people living with a diagnosis of mental illness nationwide, regardless of where a nurse chooses to work, they will encounter a patient, caregiver or co-worker living with a mental health disorder,鈥 she said. 鈥淭herefore, it is critical for nurses to receive training in approaches to delivering person-centered care to individuals with mental illness, as the emergency department is often the entry point to healthcare.鈥

William Jacobowitz, EdD, professor in the College of Nursing and Public Health.
Along with her colleague and dissertation adviser, William Jacobowitz, EdD, professor in the College of Nursing and Public Health, Dr. McIntosh co-authored 鈥溾 (Issues in Mental Health Nursing, January 2024).1 The study, which pulls from extensive national data, was the first of its kind to compare emergency nurses鈥 characteristics with their negative perceptions of mental illness.
Drs. McIntosh and Jacobowitz considered multiple factors in an effort to identify personal and professional attributes that were linked to lower levels of stigma, including attributes related to education and on-the-job support. Their data analysis revealed that nurses with previous training and work experience with psychiatric service, as well as those who had continuing access to in-service training for communication skills, sensitivity, empathy and suicide assessment, were far less likely to express stigma about people with mental illness. Additionally, participants with associate degrees in nursing reported significantly lower stigmatizing attitudes than those with other degrees, including a bachelor鈥檚 degree.
These findings have important implications for nursing education. Integrating more mental health content throughout a program鈥檚 curricula, instead of offering a single course, could significantly improve how patients with mental illness are treated by frontline nursing staff.
In their study, Drs. McIntosh and Jacobowitz also considered participants鈥 鈥渘onmodifiables,鈥 such as age, gender, race/ethnicity, marital status and shifts worked. They found that certain attributes of emergency room nurses were significantly associated with lower levels of stigma. Three demographics generally held lower rates of stigma toward mental illnesses: married female nurses, night shift nurses and nurses who identified as non-Hispanic.
While there are certainly deeper, more complex reasons for these results, the authors suggest that emergency departments can begin tackling the problem of stigmatization simply by fostering cultures of acknowledgment. In other words, nurses鈥 varying attributes and backgrounds will impact their feelings on mental illness and should be addressed accordingly. Emergency department leaders should look to implement educational and training interventions that target the specific needs of their staff. These efforts will not only cut down on bias, but ultimately improve the health outcomes of individuals with mental illness. In Dr. McIntosh鈥檚 view, the nursing profession can best reduce stigma by recognizing mental illness as an illness like any other鈥攁nd 鈥渂y treating people, all people, including people with mental illness, with care, compassion and respect.鈥
Read more in the 2025 issue of听Academic & Creative Research Magazine, where we highlight the innovation and imagination shaping Adelphi鈥檚 academic community.
1 McIntosh, J. T., & Jacobowitz, W. (2024). Attitudes of emergency nurses toward clients with mental illness: A descriptive correlational study in a nationwide U.S. sample. Issues in Mental Health Nursing, 45(1), 105鈥113.
About Our Faculty
Jennifer McIntosh, PhD 鈥21, MS 鈥24, is an adjunct professor in the College of Nursing and Public Health as well as a senior lecturer at Yale School of Nursing. A former emergency nurse, Dr. McIntosh鈥檚 recent research has focused on emergency nurses鈥 perceptions of attribution and individualized care toward people with mental illness and on 鈥淰IP care鈥: providing enhanced care to people deemed more important than others, and the clinical and ethical implications of that for nurses and care recipients.
William Jacobowitz, EdD, is a professor in the College of Nursing and Public Health whose research interests include mental health nursing and post-traumatic stress disorder. He has more than 25 years鈥 experience in senior leadership positions at psychiatric facilities throughout New York.