Medical Director
resolve Crisis Services
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
John "Jack" Rozel, MD, MSL, is an Associate Professor of Psychiatry and Adjunct Professor of Law at the University of Pittsburgh.
Dr. Rozel has served as an incident commander for mass shootings and been involved in the behavioral health response to several mass casualty events. He was a major contributor to the National Council for Behavioral Health’s 2019 report on Mass Violence, the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline’s violence assessment guidelines, and the Pennsylvania Governor’s Special Council on Gun Violence report. Dr. Rozel is a member of the Mental Health and Justice Advisory Committee for the Pennsylvania Commission on Crime and Delinquency. In conjunction with the PCCD, he is receiving funding from the US Department of Homeland Security’s Office of Targeted Violence and Terrorism Prevention to develop regional threat management partnerships in Western Pennsylvania. Dr. Rozel trains and consults with teams across UPMC and the country on projects related to violence and threat management, staff injury prevention, firearm injury prevention, and crisis and emergency psychiatry. Dr. Rozel is a Distinguished Fellow of the American Psychiatric Association, an honorary member of the American College of Emergency Physicians, a recipient of the Exemplary Psychiatrist Award from the National Alliance on Mental Illness, and was named as the Behavioral Healthcare Professional of the Year by CIT International.
Dr. Rozel has been working in emergency mental health for more than 30 years and has been the medical director of resolve Crisis Services since 2010. He is a Past President of the American Association for Emergency Psychiatry, the leading national organization dedicated to the improvement of compassionate, evidence-based care for people with psychiatric emergencies. As the medical director of resolve Crisis Services, he leads a team of 150 crisis professionals who deliver 125,000 services every year to the residents of Allegheny County through phone, mobile, walk-in and overnight programs delivered through a person centered, recovery-oriented model.
Dr. Rozel regularly provides clinical and didactic training to medical students, residents, and fellows at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine; mentors graduate students through the Center for Bioethics and Health Law; and co-teaches Mental Health Law at the School of Law. Dr. Rozel has been a CIT trainer for more than 10 years and provides training on violence and behavioral emergencies to a variety of regional and federal law enforcement professionals.
He co-writes the @ViolenceWonks Twitter feed with his colleague, Dr. Layla Soliman.
Monday, May 1, 2023
4:15 PM – 5:15 PM