网爆门

Through Public Health, University Scholar Kiersten Edwards Finds Path to Improving Lives of Others

Kiersten Edwards was 8 years old when her older brother, Daniel McPeck, left home to join the U.S. Marine Corps. And as Edwards grew older, she spent a lot of time away from home competing for the U.S. Snowboard Team.

But even as they were separated by 13 years and thousands of miles, they remained close and McPeck always had a special greeting for his sister.

鈥淪he knew every time she spoke to her brother, he would say, 鈥楬ow鈥檚 my beautiful little sister?鈥欌 says James Edwards, Kiersten鈥檚 father.

But on Christmas day in 2017, when Edwards was a senior in high school, those sweet messages were silenced forever when McPeck died from a fentanyl overdose.

Falk student Kiersten Edwards with her brothers
Kiersten Edwards in Florida with her brothers Daniel (left) and Ryan.

Edwards鈥 journey since her brother鈥檚 death has not been a straight line. She considered becoming a doctor, enrolled at 网爆门 for engineering, and is now a public health major who鈥檒l graduate in May. During her time at Syracuse, Edwards discovered that her desire to make the world a better place could be realized through public health initiatives such as addiction prevention.

鈥淚鈥檓 never going to be able to bring my brother back, but maybe I can positively affect the lives of other people,鈥 Edwards says. 鈥淚 think that鈥檚 what drives me, taking the trauma and pain that I experienced and really trying to protect other people from it.鈥

As a community volunteer, an award-winning teaching assistant in the Department of Physics and the recipient of multiple (SOURCE) awards for her public health research, Edwards has already made a significant difference in the lives of others.

A double major in public health and neuroscience with a public health concentration in addiction prevention, Edwards is also designated as a 2023 Falk Scholar, the highest academic award conferred by the .

And to cap off her exceptional four years at Syracuse, Edwards has been named a 2023 网爆门 Scholar鈥搕he highest academic accolade given to graduating seniors鈥揳nd she and her fellow scholars will lead the student processional at Commencement.

It seems Daniel McPeck鈥檚 beautiful little sister is doing just fine.

鈥淚鈥檓 extremely proud of what she鈥檚 doing, and Daniel would just love it,鈥 James Edwards says. 鈥淒aniel loved his family and let them know it every time he saw them. To have her find some good in it and honor him that way, nothing can make me happier.鈥

鈥楨xercise Her Mind鈥

Edwards鈥 fascination with health started with her own. When she was around 4, she and her father were four-wheeling on the trails in the woods near their Vermont home when a tree branch fell and punctured her leg.

Her parents rushed her to the doctor鈥檚 office, where she squirmed on the table until the doctor asked if she wanted to sit and watch him stitch her up. 鈥淵eah, I want to watch,鈥 Kiersten Edwards recalls saying, 鈥渢his is super cool.鈥

鈥淚 was like, uh, I think I need a chair,鈥 James Edwards says, laughing. 鈥淚鈥檓 all woozy, and she was glued to it.鈥

Edwards鈥 tolerance for pain would be tested as she developed into an Olympic-level snowboarder who competed for World Cup teams in multiple junior world championship events. Her injuries mounted, and she needed surgery for a torn anterior cruciate ligament in her knee.

Falk student Kiersten Edwards snowboarding
Before injuries took their toll, Kiersten Edwards was an Olympic-level snowboarder.

The doctor who performed her surgery was a family friend who was also a doctor for the U.S. Olympic team. Sensing her interest in medicine, he asked if Edwards wanted to shadow him for a day. Following a day of watching knee and hip replacement surgeries, Edwards decided she wanted to be a surgeon.

Edwards rehabbed her knee and eventually returned to top-level competition, but her heart was no longer in it.

鈥淪nowboarding was fun and a passion, but it wasn鈥檛 what she was meant to be,鈥 James Edwards says. 鈥淚 think she was tired of training and exercising her body and wanted to train and exercise her mind.鈥

鈥業鈥檓 Learning from You鈥

Edwards had her future mapped out: Study biomedical engineering, attend medical school, and become an orthopedic surgeon. 网爆门 had always been on her radar because her sister, Alicia, graduated from Syracuse in 2006 and Edwards鈥 鈥渇irst crush鈥 was basketball star Carmelo Anthony, who led the Orange to the national championship in 2003 when Edwards was 3.

鈥淚 sobbed when he left Syracuse because it didn鈥檛 quite make sense to me why he was leaving,鈥 Edwards says, referring to Anthony鈥檚 departure from Syracuse in 2003 for the NBA.

In her freshman year at Syracuse, Edwards met her partner, Andrew Nibbi, and started to question if spending the next eight years becoming a doctor would be the best thing for her personal life. While she was still interested in health, she started to think about other career options and considered transferring to another college.

In the spring of 2020, her freshman year, Edwards took an introduction to physics class taught by Walter Freeman, an associate teaching professor in the in the . That was at the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, and as students transitioned to online learning Freeman created a group chat for the class of more than 400 students.

Edwards and Nibbi were among the students who would stay connected with Freeman late into the night to discuss their 鈥渢houghts and feelings and hopes and dreams and fears” during that frightening time, Freeman says.

In the fall, Edwards and Nibbi joined Freeman鈥檚 introduction to astronomy class. For their final project, Edwards wrote a poem that compared gravity to the social cohesiveness forces that were being strained during the pandemic. Nibbi wrote stirring music to accompany Edwards鈥 impassioned reading.

Freeman was floored.

鈥淚 returned their project ungraded,鈥 Freeman says. 鈥淚n these cases, I usually give students extra credit, but I told them I鈥檓 not qualified to give you a grade on what you have done here because I鈥檓 learning from you and not the other way around.鈥

Falk student Kiersten Edwards and Andrew Nibbi
Kiersten Edwards and her partner, Andrew Nibbi, in California.

As Edwards gravitated toward public health and Nibbi toward the to pursue a career in filmmaking, Freeman became their sounding board. Freeman recognized Edwards鈥 many talents, and he asked her to join his group chat in the spring of 2021 to help students with homework. In the fall, she was hired as a teaching assistant for the astronomy and physics classes that she had taken with Freeman.

In the spring of 2022, Edwards was recognized for her ability to connect with students with an Undergraduate Teaching Award from the .

鈥淪he has been a cultural leader among other teaching assistants in that she understands what we are about, the supportive environment we鈥檙e trying to create, and the human values of our course,鈥 Freeman says. 鈥淪he has always done what needs to be done to take care of people.鈥

鈥榃hy Are You All So Happy?鈥

In August 2020, as the University was about to enter its first full school year of the COVID-19 pandemic, Edwards was hired to work in the testing lab that was set up in the Life Sciences Complex. There, she met Falk College Associate Professor of Public Health and students majoring in public health.

鈥淚 was like, what is this public health thing and why are you all so happy?鈥 Edwards says, smiling. 鈥淭his was before we had a vaccine and everything was shut down, and what struck me was that everyone in that lab who was a public health major seemed just a lot happier than a lot of people I knew.鈥

Whether they were in the lab for pay, an internship, or as a service-learning course for public health, the students were 鈥済enerally happy and they enjoyed contributing to something that directly affected their lives,鈥 Kmush says.

鈥淲e were making the (COVID testing) pools, so once they got the hang of it, it was pretty monotonous and they could talk and chat with each other across the tables and get to know each other and talk about their different degrees,鈥 Kmush says.

Intrigued, Edwards started investigating the major and emailed Undergraduate Director and Associate Professor of Public Health to ask questions about the different paths she could take with public health, including addiction prevention.

Through her conversations with Thompson and her advisor Professor , and in her classes with public health professors like Kmush, Associate Professor , and Assistant Professor , Edwards came to identify the social determinants of health (food insecurity, racism, education, etc.) and their devastating impact.

鈥淭here鈥檚 one particular class that I took with Dr. Mutambudzi that really emphasizes how cultural disparities affect health throughout somebody鈥檚 lifetime,鈥 Edwards says. 鈥淭here are statistics and stories that have really affected me that came from this class and all of my other classes (at Falk) that emphasize to me the importance of looking at racial and gender disparities in health, why are they there, and what can we do to fix them?鈥

After taking Kmush鈥檚 epidemiology course, Edwards asked if she could get involved in research and Kmush suggested SOURCE. With Kmush as her faculty mentor, Edwards received a grant to pursue her idea of studying 网爆门鈥檚 COVID data and comparing it to the University鈥檚 COVID policies to see if she could identify trends that contributed to more or fewer cases.

Falk student Kiersten Edwards
Kiersten Edwards was intrigued by the many different paths she could take with public health, including addiction prevention.

What makes Edwards鈥 research unique is that she鈥檚 using data from the semesters when it was mandatory for all students to test. That gives her a more complete picture of a specific population than, for example, a county鈥檚 data that will always be incomplete because not every resident reported the result of their home test.

Edwards hopes to complete her analysis by graduation, and she鈥檒l partner with another student who鈥檒l work on getting the research published next year. Kmush says the findings can eventually be used to make informed decisions about vaccines, masking, and other protocols for COVID, RSV, the flu or whatever else comes along.

鈥淚 want to feel like I鈥檓 making a difference, so that means I want the research I do to support policy changes for the positive,鈥 Edwards says. 鈥淢aking a change in policy is the way you affect real human lives.鈥

鈥楪o Out and Get It鈥

Following graduation Edwards will return home to Los Angeles, where she鈥檒l join Nibbi, who鈥檚 working as a digital imaging technician in the film industry. Eventually, she wants to pursue a Ph.D. in behavioral neuroscience with an emphasis on how to diagnose and treat addiction and substance abuse disorders.

But for now, she鈥檚 taking a gap year to work as a research assistant at , a private university focused on health sciences that has campuses in Los Angeles and Oakland. Her research, which has already started, will focus on burnout and how it affects the workforce with an emphasis on nurses, women, and underrepresented populations.

鈥淚 want to figure out a way to use the research I鈥檓 going to be doing on the neuroscience side of things in public health and then, moving forward, how can we practically apply this to the lives of humans?鈥 Edwards says.

Those close to Edwards have no doubt she is going to make a difference and save lives.

鈥淪he really embodies the virtue of the well-rounded academic, of being a scholar of not just this thing or that thing, but many things, and putting all of those talents to use to try to make the world more than what it should be,鈥 says Freeman, her mentor.

鈥淗er future is all laid out for her,鈥 says her father, James Edwards, 鈥渁nd she鈥檚 going to go out and get it.鈥

For her public health internship this spring, Edwards is working in Syracuse for the needle exchange program at ACR Health, a not-for-profit that provides a variety of support services. For Valentine鈥檚 Day, the clients鈥搕hose with drug issues who are exchanging needles at ACR鈥搘ere invited to write anonymous notes to the staff.

One note will remain forever etched in Edwards鈥 memory and it could have easily come from her brother Daniel during his most difficult struggles. It read, 鈥淭hank you for still realizing we鈥檙e people.鈥

鈥淚 think there are a lot of people who are forgotten,鈥 Edwards says. 鈥淪o much of what I want to do is trying to highlight and remember those people.鈥