Creating a New Kind of Doctor
We recruit and train physician leaders as comfortable taking on systemic challenges in health as caring for individual patients.
ARE YOU ONE?
Radical Collaboration. Real-World Impact.
Texas expertise fuels the discovery, delivery and diffusion of the next generation of preventions, diagnoses, treatments and cures.
LET'S GO
World Class. Close to Home.
We’re working to make person-centered, integrated care the standard in Central Texas and beyond.
Health Starts Here
More Information
GET CARE
Meet Dell Med
We’re rethinking the role of academic medicine in improving health — and doing so with a unique focus on our community.
ABOUT US
More Information
EXPLORE
Make an Appointment Give Faculty Students Alumni Directory

Eileen Stewart, M.D.

UT Health Austin Care Team Member
Education

M.D.
The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

Residency/Fellowship

Residency, Pediatrics
The University of New Mexico

Fellowship, Pediatric Cardiology
Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh

About

Eileen Stewart, M.D., is a board-certified pediatric and fetal cardiologist and serves as the medical director of the IMPACT Single Ventricle Program within the Texas Center for Pediatric and Congenital Heart Disease, a clinical partnership between Dell Children’s Medical Center and UT Health Austin. She specializes in the diagnosis and treatment of congenital and acquired heart conditions in infants, children, adolescents and during pregnancy.

She earned her bachelor’s degree in zoology from the University of Miami and her medical degree from The University of Texas Medical School at Houston. She completed a residency in pediatrics at the University of New Mexico Children’s Hospital and a fellowship in pediatric cardiology at Children’s Hospital of Pittsburgh.

Stewart also serves as the medical director of the IMPACT Program, which provides care for high-complexity cardiac infants, as well as the Cardiac Feeding Program and is the co-director of the Central Texas Fetal Heart Center. Her research interests include improving outcomes for single ventricle patients and addressing feeding and nutrition in cardiac infants.