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Margaret Stuber, M.D.
Margaret Stuber, M.D.

Specialty:

Psychiatry

General Information:

Gender:
Female
Language(s):
English

Affiliation(s):

Jane and Marc Nathanson Professor and Director, Department of Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences, Medical Student Education
Director, David Geffen School of Medicine, Doctoring Curriculum
Physician, Department of Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences, Child and Adolescent Psychiatry
Member, JCCC Patients and Survivors Program Area

Hospital Affiliation(s):

UCLA Neuropsychiatric Hospital
Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center

Education:

Fellowship:
Child Psychiatry, UCLA Neuropsychiatric Hospital, 1982 - 1984
Residency:
Psychiatry, UCLA Neuropsychiatric Hospital, 1980 - 1982
Internship:
Psychiatry, Hawthorn Center, 1979
Medical Degree:
M.D., University of Michigan School of Medicine, 1979

Certification(s):

Medical Board Certification(s):
Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology, 1985
Psychiatry, American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology, 1985

Contact Information:

Phone:
(310) 825-5213
E-mail:

Scientific Interest(s):

Dr. Margaret Stuber studies the emotional responses of children and their families to life-threatening illness. These include symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder, as well as the ability to find meaning in adversity. As part of the National Child Traumatic Stress Network, Stuber helps hospitals learn how to help children and families deal with cancer diagnosis and treatment. Through her roles in medical student education and grants from the National Cancer Institute and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Stuber also helps develop curriculum to teach future doctors how to better understand people dealing with cancer and other life-threatening illnesses.

Stuber is one of the pioneers in the understanding of post-traumatic stress response to life-threatening pediatric illnesses in children and their parents. She has studied the prevalence, correlations and prevention of these symptoms in survivors of childhood cancer and their parents, and well as in pediatric solid organ transplants.

Stuber is currently focused on curricular development for medical students. She is actively engaged in development of curricular elements addressing cancer survivors, and has recently moved into curricular development in spirituality and complementary and alternative medicine.

Selected Cancer-Related Publications:

Stuber ML, Shemesh E. Post-traumatic Stress Response to Life-Threatening Illnesses in Children and Their Parents. Child Adolesc Psychiatr Clin N Am. 2006; 15(3): 597-609.

Myers C, Stuber ML, Bonamer-Rheingans JI, Zeltzer LK. Complementary therapies and childhood cancer. Cancer Control. 2005; 12(3): 172-80.

Hobbie W, Stuber ML, Meeske K, Ruccione K, Kazak AE. PTSD in young adult survivors of childhood cancer. J Clin Oncol. 2000; 18:4060-4066.

Barakat LP, Kazak AE, Meadows AT, Casey R, Meeske K, Stuber ML. Families surviving childhood cancer: a comparison of posttraumatic stress symptoms with families of healthy children. J Ped Psych. 1997; 22 (6):843-859.

Stuber ML, Kazak AE, Meeske K, Barakat L, Guthrie D, Garnier H, Pynoos RS, Meadows A. Predictors of posttraumatic stress symptoms in childhood cancer survivors. Pediatrics. 1997; 100(6):958-964.