Doctorate Opens New Vistas for Educator-Researcher

Life with a freshly minted doctorate from the University of Cincinnati doesn’t necessarily signal a career change for Eileen Steinle Alexander. It’s more, in her words, "a slightly new direction that I didn’t see coming.”

Alexander will receive her PhD in epidemiology from the College of Medicine during UC’s Aug. 9 summer commencement, adding it to degrees from the College of Nursing (bachelor of science) and the McMicken College of Arts and Sciences (biology and ecological toxicology). She started her career in health care three decades ago as a cardiac surgery nurse and educator.

"In those days you had a choice of nurse or teacher if you were going to go to college,” she says, "and I’ve kind of done both.”

In her role as a nurse-educator, first in heart surgery and then in infection control, Alexander found herself working more and more with charts, graphs and rates based on systems that were designed by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention "but not actually coming up with the models on our own.”

"So when I got to the point where I had a lot of really interesting data that I knew had not yet been published, I decided it was time to go back to school and learn how to do that—the real statistical modeling that would explain a lot of what we were seeing, and also learn how to publish and get the word out.”

Alexander, in searching for the appropriate public health/epidemiology program, found that UC’s was housed in the College of Medicine’s Department of Environmental Health. "I learned that this was really the right program for me,” she says, adding that she started classes in 2008.

"I’m very glad I came to UC, and the opportunities have been tremendous,” she says, adding that she and Shuk-Mei Ho, PhD, Jacob H. Schmidlapp Chair of Environmental Health, share the same special interest in epigenetics.

Alexander has made the most of those opportunities: As a fellow on the Molecular Epidemiology and Children’s Environmental Health training grant, she received support from the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences and received the Young Investigator Award from the International Eusinophil Society in 2011. 

She was recently awarded a UC Research Council Fellowship and is a Frank C. Woodside III, MD, Dinsmore & Shohl Fellow in the Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center’s Division of Biostatistics and Epidemiology. She plans to teach at Xavier University while continuing research in family-based public health strategies to explore the effects of environment on epigenetics.

"So I still get to teach, and I’ll still have some interaction with families and patients,” she says. "But now instead of implementing someone else’s system, I get to create my own as a scientist.”

Related Stories

3

At least two weather patterns increase headaches, UC study suggests

June 4, 2026

University of Cincinnati physicians and collaborators identified two specific weather patterns that increase headache and migraine risk and found the preventive medication fremanezumab (Ajovy) can reduce weather‑associated headaches. The findings will be presented at the American Headache Society Annual Scientific Meeting in Orlando.