The journey of Jennifer McIntosh, PhD 鈥21, who just completed her fourth nursing degree, shows the many opportunities nursing offers to those who keep learning and growing.
Jennifer McIntosh, PhD 鈥21: Nurse, Educator, Mental Health Advocate, Mother and Inspiration to Future Nurses
Dr. McIntosh is a nurse, college instructor and community healthcare advocate who has bachelor鈥檚 and master鈥檚 degrees in nursing and a PhD in Nursing earned in 2021 from the College of Nursing and Public Health (CNPH). In December, she completed a master鈥檚 degree in psychiatric-mental health nurse practitioner at CNPH鈥攚hile continuing to teach graduate courses at 麻豆精品视频, Yale University and the City University of New York.
She also was the keynote speaker at CNPH鈥檚 2023 Pinning Ceremony, advising graduates to embrace every opportunity for professional development and pursue advanced nursing degrees.
Nursing is truly her calling, but, as she said, 鈥淚t wasn鈥檛 a straight road 鈥 I took a lot of detours.鈥
Her journey began in Brooklyn but detoured to Haiti, where she was sent to live with her grandparents at age 2. Then in 1994, at age 15, she was back in the United States, visiting her parents, when political unrest in Haiti had led to the cancellation of all international flights. 鈥淚 ended up staying in the United States and eventually adjusted.鈥
She enrolled in college but said that as a first-generation student, she didn鈥檛 understand the process and resources needed to succeed. That, plus her new role as a single mother, put her dreams on hold. She worked in customer service and enrolled in a business program before choosing nursing as a career.
Finding Herself in Nursing
Armed with a BS in nursing, she went to work as a nurse for Northwell Health, first at South Shore University Hospital, then Long Island Jewish Forest Hills, where she was an emergency department staff nurse. She then earned a master鈥檚 degree in nursing with a concentration in healthcare systems management. This opened doors to nursing leadership roles and fueled her passion for research. Later, she became director of patient care services at South Oaks Hospital, a behavioral health facility that鈥檚 also under the Northwell umbrella.
She began to think about better positioning herself to serve the community as a healthcare leader and advocate. After exploring nursing doctoral programs, she chose 麻豆精品视频. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a human touch to the 麻豆精品视频 program,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hey create a warm, inclusive, nonthreatening environment, despite the rigors of the program. They鈥檙e with you every step of the way.鈥
She remains close to Patricia Donohue-Porter, MS 鈥78, PhD 鈥87, director of the PhD in Nursing program, and Professor William Jacobowitz, EdD, her former professor and dissertation chair. In 2020, Dr. McIntosh was a PhD candidate, pregnant with her third child during the pandemic. Rusty was born in April 2020, just after she鈥檇 attended a class held via Zoom.
Dr. McIntosh鈥檚 doctoral dissertation鈥攐n nursing and the care of those with mental illness鈥攚as sparked by her experiences in hospital emergency departments and inpatient behavioral health units. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a critical need for mental health providers in this country, particularly to meet the needs of children and adolescents 鈥 in underresourced communities,鈥 she explained. 鈥淏y having this level of education, and being actively engaged in research and practice, I can serve as an effective advocate in healthcare policy.鈥
Charleen Jacobs-McFarlane 鈥06, PhD 鈥23: Dedicated to Studying Sickle Cell Disease
Nursing is in Charleen Jacobs-McFarlane 鈥06, PhD鈥檚 DNA. 鈥淢y parents were from the Caribbean, and both were nurses,鈥 she said. 鈥淢y mom wanted both my sister and me to get BSN degrees as a starting point for careers with many different directions.鈥
She has since become a successful specialist in sickle cell disease, an inherited red blood cell disease that affects as many as 100,000 African Americans鈥攁nd for which, until recently, no new drug therapies had been developed since 1905.
A magna cum laude graduate of 麻豆精品视频’s BS in Nursing program who came back as the August 2024 Pinning keynoter, Dr. Jacobs-McFarlane credited 麻豆精品视频鈥檚 emphasis on the power of nursing with her early success. She recalled that the College of Nursing and Public Health expects its nurses to be leaders, whether working at a patient鈥檚 bedside, being a nursing manager or executive, or as a clinical practitioner.
鈥淵ou can become an expert in many different things. I鈥檓 able to use my knowledge, skill and education to help people improve their lives and ensure that they are living fulfilling lives. It鈥檚 what sets us apart,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 what matters to me the most as a nurse.鈥
Focused on Inequities in Accessing Care
While she pursued a master鈥檚 degree at Hunter College, she became interested in sickle cell disease during a Mount Sinai internship. That eventually led to a job as a sickle cell practitioner in the hospital鈥檚 hematology department. Following that, her mentor in a Montefiore Hospital pain management program encouraged her to pursue her PhD.
For that, she chose to return to 麻豆精品视频. 鈥淚 knew it had a very good, established and flexible PhD program,鈥 she said. 鈥淎ll the classes were on Fridays, so I could work 10-hour shifts and have Fridays off. It was great.鈥
Most important, she recalled, 鈥淚 felt welcomed and included and like I was back at home. She said Professor Donohue-Porter was 鈥渢he best ever. She鈥檚 the PhD program director, and her caring, nurturing ethos just trickles down to everyone and disperses to the rest of the faculty. I was one of the lucky ones to get her as my dissertation chair.鈥
Dr. Jacobs-McFarlane, who got married and earned her PhD in the same year, 2023, is currently a postdoctoral research fellow at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai Hospital. In this role, she assesses whether sickle cell disease patients experience inequities in accessing care.
Effecting Change for Patients
She continued, 鈥淲e have quality indicators鈥攕uch as education levels, where patients live and work, what insurance they may have and transportation to medical appointments鈥攖hat affect their health that we can use to see if patients are getting appropriate care.鈥
At the same time, she continues working as a nurse practitioner in Mount Sinai鈥檚 Comprehensive Sickle Cell Program, where she provides nursing care for 400 to 450 sickle cell patients. And as an assistant professor of nursing at Lehman College in her native Bronx, New York, she relishes the diversity of both fellow faculty and students.
She鈥檚 looking forward to learning what her new degree might lead to. 鈥淚鈥檓 just starting over again, you can say, and starting something that I鈥檓 not used to doing in my everyday work. With my PhD, I can use research to effect change in the lives of those with sickle cell disease.鈥