[1] Inline with the law of suffrage enacted in 1934, Turkish women were granted to vote and run for a seat in the parliament.
It was revealed that President Mustafa Kemal Atatürk personally wanted Memik's nomination due to her profession as a physician.
In addition, she was a member of the commissions formed for the bills to Labor Law and Sports Organizations.
In a report for the parliament, she prepared with other deputies of Edirne Province, it was recommended that immigrants should be settled in empty areas to promote production, the Chemins de fer Orientaux (transl.
Oriental Railway) should be nationalized, a leveee needs to be constructed to regulate the flooding River Maritsa and the swamps causing malaria in the region should be urgently drained.
She took part at the International Congress on Child Welfare held in Belgrade, Kingdom of Yugoslavia on October 1, 1938.
Between 1947 and 1949, she worked as an internist at Ankara Numune Hospital, and from 1950 to 1951 in the dispensary of the health insurance of workers in Beşiktaş, Istanbul.