University of Virginia professors Micah Mazurek and Dr. Beth Ellen Davis have spent their careers working to improve the health and well-being of children with disabilities. Both Davis’ and Mazurek’s long-standing commitment to this work is, in part, an outgrowth of their serving as fellows and, ultimately, leaders in the national Leadership Education in Neurodevelopment & Related Disabilities, or LEND, program.
For Mazurek, professor at the UVA School of Education and Human Development and director of the Supporting Transformative Autism Research initiative, working directly with children with disabilities and their families as a doctoral student in clinical psychology shaped the course of her professional life.
“Training as a LEND fellow was an incredibly powerful experience for me early in my professional journey, giving me hands-on experience and opening my eyes to the joys and challenges of day-to-day life for children with disabilities and their families,” Mazurek said. “Those experiences changed the trajectory of my career.”
Davis’ career as a developmental-behavioral pediatrician and professor at the UVA School of Medicine has been shaped by her desire to see all children lead meaningful lives and be happy.
“Children with disabilities often need special families and ‘a village’ to accomplish this goal,” Davis said. “Daily, I am privileged to be part of the circle of support needed by families to offer their child with disability the same opportunities for fun, friendship, fellowship, family, function and future, as any other child.”
Now, Davis and Mazurek are partnering to co-direct one of the newest LEND programs in the nation. The Blue Ridge LEND, established with a $2.2 million grant from the Health Resources and Services Administration of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, is one of 60 federally funded interdisciplinary training programs across the country that seeks to improve the systems of care for children with autism and other developmental disabilities.
Mazurek and Davis will be joined by colleagues Erica Rouch and Rose Nevill, both of whom are research assistant professors of education and were also LEND fellows during their graduate studies. Rouch will serve as the training director for the Blue Ridge LEND, and Nevill as the lead evaluator. Interdisciplinary core faculty from the UVA School of Education and Human Development, UVA School of Medicine and Mary Baldwin University will also participate in the program.

