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Meet Our Students: Maya Marzouk

Maya Marzouk Maya Marzouk
Maya Marzouk is a fourth-year doctoral candidate in the Clinical Psychology, Health Emphasis PhD program at the Ferkauf Graduate School of Psychology. She received a Frontiers in Headache Research Award for her research on “The Family Burden of Pediatric Migraine,” which provided funding for her travel to the 2019 Scottsdale Headache Symposium in Scottsdale, Arizona, from November 21-24. While there, she participated in a training done by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) for early career researchers in the field of headache medicine. YU News talked with her about the nature of her research and what she has been discovering.
What is the focus of your research? My research focuses on the impact of pediatric migraine on parents and families. I didn’t know that “pediatric migraine” existed. Migraine is a recurrent episodic neurologic illness characterized in children by pain, nausea and vomiting. It’s a prevalent disorder affecting an estimated 10% of children between the ages of 5 and 15 years and in up to 28% of adolescents aged 15-19. It seems that it affects an awful lot of children. Pediatric migraine can diminish quality of life to a degree comparable to pediatric cancer. It’s also associated with significant social, emotional and academic impairments. What specifically do you want to study? I want to look at specific psychosocial factors and characteristics of pediatric migraine to understand their role as predictors of poorer family functioning and increased migraine-related caregiver stress. I wanted to determine the risk factors of this stress and understand the relationship between migraine-related caregiver stress and family dysfunction because I think this serves as a foundational step toward mitigating the impact of pediatric migraine on the family. Your research is ongoing at the moment. I’m working with Dr. Elizabeth Seng, who is the primary investigator, and the work will be completed in conjunction with Dr. Amy Gelfand at the University of California, San Francisco Benioff Children’s Hospital Child and Adolescent Headache Program. What was the NIH training like? The NIH training session was led by Dr. Michael Oshinsky, Program Director for Pain and Migraine at The National Institute of Neurological Disorders, as part of the Emerging Leaders Program. The Frontiers awardees were invited to participate in the training. What’s the future hold for you? I am primarily interested in pediatric psychology. Long-term, I am hoping to continue research in the headache field and am aiming to transition toward clinical work in pediatric headache psychology. My research currently focuses on the way that families as a unit are impacted by migraine.