ÌÇÐĹÙÍø

Academic Credentials
  • M.P.H., Public Health, University of California, Berkeley, 2023
  • B.S., Biology and Anthropology, St. Mary's College of Maryland, 2018
Professional Honors
  • Dr. Charles H. Powell Award, American Industrial Hygiene Association – Northern California Section (2022)
  • NIOSH Industrial Hygiene Traineeship (2021-2023)
  • Kaiser Permanente Scholar, University of California, Berkeley (2021-2023)
Professional Affiliations
  • American Industrial Hygiene Association (member)
  • American Industrial Hygiene Association, Northern California Section (Board Director) 2024-Present
  • Women in Environment San Francisco Bay Area Chapter, Treasurer 2025-Present

Ms. Tineo is an environmental health scientist who specializes in industrial hygiene, occupational health and exposure assessment. Her work at ÌÇÐĹÙÍøfocuses on indoor environmental quality and the exposure evaluations of consumer products. She has contributed industrial hygiene research, litigation, and analysis across a range of exposures, including asbestos, mold, talc, benzene, carbon monoxide, VOCs, per-and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS), consumer products, and pharmaceuticals. 

Ms. Tineo has conducted chemical and physical exposure assessments (e.g., mold, asbestos, fire residues, carbon monoxide, lead, BTEX, noise, volatile organic compounds (VOCs), and heat) qualitative and quantitative data analysis, literature reviews, and also has experience developing injury and illness prevention programs. Ms. Tineo also supports designing studies to assess potential exposure to consumer and personal care products, including the evaluation of lead, cadmium, phthalates, diethanolamine (DEA), bisphenol A (BPA), bisphenol S (BPS), and PFAS. Ms. Tineo has conducted sampling to evaluate Proposition 65 claims to address dermal exposure, and incidental ingestion associated with hand to mouth activities from numerous consumer products. 

She holds a Master of Public Health from the University of California, Berkeley with a concentration in Industrial Hygiene. Her master's thesis focused on evaluating the use of wearable technology to mitigate occupational heat stress through continuous personal and physiological monitoring. She received her B.S. in Biology and B.A. in Anthropology from St. Mary's College of Maryland.