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  • Contains 3 Component(s) Includes a Live Web Event on 02/11/2026 at 7:00 AM (EST)

    Presented by the Musculoskeletal Pain SIG

    This webinar will take place on Wednesday 11 February 2026 at 7:00 a.m. EST

    Free to IASP Members; $25.00 for non-members

    Join three world-leading researchers as they unpack the latest science on the mechanisms behind common musculoskeletal pain conditions and modern approaches to clinical assessment. This webinar brings together cutting-edge perspectives on multisensory evaluation, mechanistic pain classifications, and diagnostic approaches to musculoskeletal pain.

    Learning Objectives:

    1. Learn how multisensory assessment can improve the way we evaluate people with musculoskeletal pain.
    2. Understand the strengths and limits of using mechanistic pain classifications, including nociplastic pain
    3. Recognise nociceptive causes of back pain and know when imaging is useful for diagnosis.

    Faculty:

    • Alessandro Chiarotto (Netherlands)
    • Laura A. Frey Law (USA)
    • Paul Hodges (AU)
    • Stephanie Smith (UK) (Chair)

    Alessandro Chiarotto

    Researcher - Spine-related musculoskeletal disorders

    Erasmus MC, University Medical Center Rotterdam

    Dr. Alessandro Chiarotto has a background in physiotherapy (BSc, University of Padua, 2005) and clinical epidemiology (MSc ‘cum laude’, VU University Amsterdam, 2014). During his PhD, he coordinated an international group of researchers, clinicians and patients consumers to develop a core outcome measurement set for clinical trials in patients with low back pain. He completed his PhD in 2018 (VU University Amsterdam) with a thesis entitled “A core outcome measurement set for low back pain”. Since 2018, he works at the Department of General Practice of Erasmus MC. He also works part-time at the VU Department of Health Sciences.

    Dr. Chiarotto’s research currently focuses on the clinical management of patients with spine-related musculoskeletal disorders, and on methodological research on the assessment and interpretation of patient-reported outcome measures. He was co-promotor of one PhD student who successfully defended his PhD (2020, Erasmus MC). He now supervises 7 PhD students and one post-doctoral researcher. He has > 40 articles published in international scientific journals (Scopus H-Index 16), including high ranking journals like BMJ, Pain, Journal of Clinical Epidemiology. Two years and half after the end of his PhD, he acquired > 500.000€ in research funding.

    Laura A. Frey Law, MPT, MS, PhD

    Professor of Physical Therapy and Rehabilitation Science

    University of Iowa Carver College of Medicine

    Laura A. Frey Law is a Professor of Physical Therapy and Rehabilitation Science at the University of Iowa, where she leads research within the Neuromuscular Biomechanics Laboratory. Her work centers on two major areas of investigation: pain heterogeneity and the dynamics of muscular strength and fatigue.

    Dr. Frey Law’s research on pain seeks to understand the multifactorial contributors to individual pain variability, including biological sex, psychological traits, genetics, and activity levels. Utilizing experimental human pain models—such as intramuscular infusion, cold pressor testing, and induced muscle fatigue—along with survey-based measures of pain perception and personality characteristics, she investigates why women appear more likely than men to exhibit referred pain despite similar local pain responses.

    Her second line of research focuses on mathematical modeling and empirical study of strength and fatigue, conducted in collaboration with the Virtual Soldier Research group. This work explores static and dynamic strength indices, aging-related differences, sex-based variations, and muscle-specific fatigue patterns to better understand human physical performance capacity and its clinical implications.

    Paul Hodges

    Professor and Director of the Centre for Innovation in Pain and Health Research

    The University of Queensland

    Paul W. Hodges DSc MedDr PhD BPhty(Hons) FAA FACP APAM(Hon) is an National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) Leadership Fellow (Level 3), Professor and Director of the Centre for Innovation in Pain and Health Research (CIPHeR) at The University of Queensland (UQ). He is lead chief investigator on an NHMRC Synergy Grant that includes colleagues from the Universities of Queensland, Adelaide and South Australia, and the South Australian Health and Medical Research Institute. Paul is a Fellow of the Australian Academy of Science, which is a Fellowship of the nation's most distinguished scientists, elected by their peers for outstanding research that has pushed back the frontiers of knowledge. He is also a Fellow of the Australian College of Physiotherapists, the Australian Academy of Health and Medical Science, and was made an Honoured member of the Australian Physiotherapy Association, their highest honour.

    Stephanie Smith (Moderator)

    Research Fellow

    University of Nottingham

    Stephanie Smith is a researcher within the Pain Centre Versus Arthritis at the University of Nottingham, studying pain management in osteoarthritis knee pain. Stephanie completed a BSc and MRes in Sports and Exercise Science at Nottingham Trent University, followed by a PhD at Glasgow Caledonian University exploring neuromuscular control in knee osteoarthritis. Stephanie then continued working as a post-doc researcher at Glasgow Caledonian University investigating the biomechanics of knee osteoarthritis before joining the University of Nottingham. Her interests lie in bridging the gap between basic science and clinical applications which a particular focus on neuromuscular control, muscle function and pain in osteoarthritis, rheumatic diseases and musculoskeletal conditions. She has also published in phenotyping and ultrasound in osteoarthritis.

  • Upcoming Webinar
    Product not yet rated Contains 3 Component(s) Includes a Live Web Event on 02/06/2026 at 10:00 AM (EST)

    Join us for the Placebo Beyond Opinions Center guest lecture hybrid series. The series will explore the roles of neuroscience, empathy and the placebo effect in the management of chronic pain. This lecture on "Human-Centric Molecular Pain Neuroscience," is presented by Michele Curatolo, MD, PhD.

    This webinar is being produced through a collaboration of the IASP's Pain and Placebo Special Interest Group and the University of Maryland, Baltimore, USA - in particular - the University of Maryland School of Nursing's Placebo Beyond Opinions Organized Research Center. Both groups are aligned on advancing unbiased knowledge of placebo effects by promoting interdisciplinary investigation of the placebo phenomenon and nurturing placebo research.

    Please note that this webinar is unique in that it is being hosted (both in-personal and virtually) by the University of Maryland. 

    Join us for the Placebo Beyond Opinions Center guest lecture hybrid series. The series will explore the roles of neuroscience, empathy and the placebo effect in the management of chronic pain. This lecture on "Human-Centric Molecular Pain Neuroscience," is presented by Michele Curatolo, MD, PhD.

    Curatolo is professor of Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine at the University of Washington, endowed professor for medical education, and research and director of the interventional pain program. His expertise is in pain management, education and research. Having published over 220 publications, his research focuses on studying nociceptive processes in humans to improve the understanding of pain and facilitate the development of treatments. Curatolo was one of the initiators of the field of ultrasound-guided interventional pain procedures. With an extensive experience in university teaching and mentoring, he has been invited to hold over 300 lectures, courses and workshops in national and international meetings. He has served as reviewer for multiple high ranked scientific journals, funding agencies and external academic institutions.

    *If you would like to receive CE credit for attending this webinar, Register Here

    Michele Curatolo, MD, PhD

    Professor of Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine

    University of Washington, USA

    Curatolo is professor of Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine at the University of Washington, endowed professor for medical education, and research and director of the interventional pain program. His expertise is in pain management, education and research. Having published over 220 publications, his research focuses on studying nociceptive processes in humans to improve the understanding of pain and facilitate the development of treatments. Curatolo was one of the initiators of the field of ultrasound-guided interventional pain procedures. With an extensive experience in university teaching and mentoring, he has been invited to hold over 300 lectures, courses and workshops in national and international meetings. He has served as reviewer for multiple high ranked scientific journals, funding agencies and external academic institutions.

    Luana Colloca, MD, PhD (Moderator)

    Professor of Pain and Translational Symptom Science

    University of Maryland, USA

    Luana Colloca is an NIH-funded physician-scientist who conducted ground-breaking studies that have advanced scientific understanding of the psychoneurobiological bases of endogenous systems for pain modulation in humans including the discovery that the vasopressin system is involved in the enhancement of placebo effects with a dimorphic effect. Currently, her team conducts basic and translational research on genomics of orofacial chronic pain, brain mechanisms of expectancy - and observationally-induced hypoalgesia - and immersive virtual reality. Her research has been published in top-ranked international journals including Biological Psychiatry, Pain, Nature Neuroscience, JAMA, Lancet Neurology, Science and NEJM. The impact of her innovative work is clear from her outstanding publications, citation rate, numerous invited lectures worldwide and media featured by The National Geographic, The New Scientist, Washington Post, Boston Globe, The New Yorker, Nature, The Guardian, The Wall Street Journal, News and World Reports.

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  • Upcoming Webinar
    Product not yet rated Contains 3 Component(s) Includes a Live Web Event on 02/05/2026 at 11:00 AM (EST)

    Presented by IASP

    This webinar will take place on Wednesday, 5 February at 11:00 a.m. EST

    Free to IASP Members; $25.00 for non-members

    This webinar presents the process and impact of the inaugural Power Over Pain Empowerment Jubilee—a novel community engaged educational event to empower Black and older community members to conquer pain. Developed by Dr. Star Booker, the purpose of the event was to provide free access to pain education, community and health resources, empowerment and support, and advocacy skills. This jubilee was carefully created to introduce the community to diverse perspectives, evidence-based education, and hands-on learning. In this webinar, attendees can expect to learn about community-engagement in action, the importance and impact of community-engagement in pain research, and the process of planning and implementing a first-of-its-kind local community event.

    Learning Objectives:

    1. Attendees will gain insight into the detailed process of designing and hosting an evidence-based, community-wide event that empowers individuals with chronic pain, caregivers, and advocates to live well beyond the pain. 
    2. This session will cover how to integrate such activities into a broader program of research.

    Faculty:

    Staja "Star" Booker, University of Florida, USA
    Candace McMillon-Dantley, WellPower, USA

    Staja "Star" Booker (Moderator)

    PhD, RN, FAAN; Associate Professor

    University of Florida

    Dr. Staja “Star” Booker, PhD, RN, FAAN is a tenured Associate Professor at the University of Florida, College of Nursing, widely recognized for her pioneering scholarship on pain disparities, injustices, and health equity. She leads a transformative program of research on the science of pain and aging, advancing understanding of the lived experiences and management of chronic pain among older adults—particularly those who identify as African American/Black. Dr. Booker’s research portfolio is distinguished by multiple NIH-funded studies, reshaping how pain in later life is conceptualized and managed and improving health and quality of life for older adults experiencing pain and disability. Her current NIH-funded R01 is a randomized controlled trial testing an innovative pain self-management intervention designed to address social determinants influencing chronic musculoskeletal pain in African Americans/Blacks.

    A Fellow of the American Academy of Nursing, she has authored over 110 peer-reviewed publications and editorials, eleven book chapters, and delivered 140 scientific presentations. She is a distinguished scientist, nurse, and advocate. She served on the inaugural Board of Directors for the United States Association for the Study of Pain, helping to develop a new scientific organization in the U.S. Her exceptional contributions have been recognized with numerous honors, including the University of Florida Excellence Award for Assistant Professors—the first ever awarded to College of Nursing faculty—as well as the Southern Nursing Research Society’s Early Science Investigator Award, the IASP Pain in Older Persons SIG Junior Investigator Award, and the American Society for Pain Management Nursing® Excellence in Nursing Award for Pain Management of the Older Adult. Dr. Booker remains an influential leader and active member in several national and international pain, gerontology, and nursing organizations, where she continues to advance equity, innovation, and excellence in pain research, care, and education.

    Candace McMillon-Dantley DC, LLC

    CEO

    WellPower

    Candace helps individuals and organizations create healthier, more empowered lives through education, connection, and strategy. With a clinical background and over 15 years of experience teaching health concepts in accessible, human ways, she specializes in wellness program design, virtual health education, and instructional content creation. Whether leading a workshop on stress and burnout, designing a musculoskeletal wellness module, or guiding a group of women in letting go of over-functioning, her work is driven by purpose: helping people take off the cape and care for their whole selves.

  • Upcoming Webinar
    Contains 3 Component(s) Includes a Live Web Event on 01/29/2026 at 8:00 AM (EST)

    Presented by the Global Year 2026 Task Force Members.

    This webinar will take place on Wednesday, 29 January at 08:00 a.m. ET

    This Global Year 2026 webinar is free to all. 

    This first webinar to launch the IASP Global Year on neuropathic pain will introduce the Global Year project, its goals, aims, and planned activities and outputs. Talks will summarise contemporary definitions of neuropathic pain, the epidemiology of neuropathic pain, and the burden it places on people and society. We will hear firsthand the experiences of people with neuropathic pain.

    Speakers include IASP President, Professor Andrew Rice; Dr. Harry Hebert, an expert in the epidemiology of neuropathic pain; Global Year chairs, Professors Angelika Lampert and Neil O’Connell; Fiona Talkington, a broadcast journalist who lives with neuropathic pain; Jo Josh, a communications consultant who also lives with neuropathic pain; and Assistant Professor Dr. Mohammed Zunaid, a doctor working with people with neuropathic pain in Bangladesh.

    This webinar is meant to be interactive.  Please bring your questions, ideas, and comments. 

    Moderator:

    Fiona Talkington – United Kingdom


    Panelists:

    Harry Hebert – United Kingdom

    Jo Josh – United Kingdom

    Angelika Lampert – Germany

    Neil O’Connell – United Kingdom

    Andrew Rice – United Kingdom

    Mohammad Zunaid – Bangladesh (Asia)


    Fiona Talkington (Moderator)

    BBC

    Fiona Talkington is a distinguished BBC radio presenter, best known for hosting the award-winning program Late Junction. She has presented live concerts from venues such as the Royal Albert Hall and Wigmore Hall and produced documentaries and talk shows for the BBC. Fiona holds a Master of Arts in Literature and the Visual Arts and a Master of Science in Creative Writing for Therapeutic Purposes (CWTP). She received the Royal Norwegian Order of Merit for her contributions to the arts and an honorary doctorate (D.Litt) from the University of Reading.  

    Drawing on her personal experience with chronic neuropathic pain, Fiona serves as a patient partner in PAINSTORM and co-produces its podcast, PAINCAST.  

    She has also participated in numerous SIGs for IASP and has facilitated numerous workshops for students and research groups with her focus on the communication and expression of chronic pain for individuals and in healthcare settingsand expression of chronic pain for individuals and in healthcare settings. In addition, Fiona has a forthcoming publication with Bloomsbury on the role of creative arts in enhancing communication between patients and clinicians. 

    Harry Hebert

    University of Dundee

    Harry Hebert is a Principal Investigator (Tenure Track) at the University of Dundee, specializing in chronic pain pharmacoepidemiology with a focus on neuropathic pain. He holds a BSc (Hons) in Genetics from the University of Nottingham (2009), an MSc in Human Molecular Genetics from Imperial College London (2010), and a PhD in Genetic Epidemiology from the University of Manchester (2015). Following his doctoral studies, Harry worked as a postdoctoral researcher in the Chronic Pain Research Group under Professors Blair H. Smith and Lesley Colvin at Dundee. Appointed to his current role in 2024, he leads the PAINSTORM Dundee study, funded by the Advanced Pain Discovery Platform (APDP), and conducts research into gabapentinoid reclassification in the UK and risk factors for mortality among individuals with chronic pain and substance use disorders. His career goal is to improve the lives of people living with chronic pain by leading research that influences clinical guidelines, policy, and practice. 

     

     

    Jo Josh

    British HIV Association (BHIVA)

    Jo Josh is a freelance communications professional specializing in translating medical and research information into plain language for mainstream audiences. Her background includes news and feature production for print and broadcast media, brand marketing, and crisis management. Since 2018, Jo has worked with the British HIV Association (BHIVA) on communications and advocacy with media, health systems, government, and HIV community organizations.  

    She suffers from HIV-related peripheral neuropathy and edited language for “ACT OPEN,” a randomized controlled trial of online acceptance and commitment therapy for neuropathic pain in people living with HIV. In 2022, Jo provided plain language translations of research papers for IASP and is one of three patient partners for the PAINSTORM consortium (https://www.painstorm.co.uk), a three-year research project into the causes and mechanisms of neuropathic pain. She is a member of the Advanced Pain Discovery Platform (APDP).  

    Jo’s roles include Data Safety Monitoring on the RIO study (bNAbs), CONNECT research into digital communications in sexual health, and patient communications for Surrey and Sussex Healthcare Trust as a member of its Council of Governors. She is a former Vice Chair of a NICE committee. 

     

     

    Angelika Lampert

    Institute of Neurophysiology at RWTH Aachen University

    Angelika Lampert, MD, is Director of the Institute of Neurophysiology at RWTH Aachen University, Germany. She coordinates the Sodium Channel Network Aachen and serves as speaker of the Scientific Center for Neuropathic Pain Aachen (SCNAACHEN), focusing on inherited neuropathic pain syndromes such as small fiber neuropathy linked to sodium channel mutations. Her research emphasizes translational basic science, including patient-derived stem cells, Patch-Seq, sodium channel biophysics, and pharmacology. Angelika is co-chair of the IASP Global Year 2026 on Neuropathic Pain. 

     

    Neil O'Connell

    Brunel University of London

    Neil is Professor of Evidence-Based Healthcare in the Physiotherapy Division of the Department of Health Sciences. He previously worked as a musculoskeletal physiotherapist and now divides his time between teaching and research. Neil’s research focuses on evidence-based management of persistent pain, and he has published extensively in this area. He leads modules on clinical research methods and evidence-based practice for pre- and post-graduate clinicians. Neil served as Coordinating Editor for the Cochrane Pain, Palliative and Supportive Care (PaPaS) group from 2020–2023 and was a member of Cochrane’s central editorial board. He contributed to the UK NICE 2016 clinical guideline on low back pain and sciatica and currently chairs the IASP Methods, Evidence Synthesis and Implementation Special Interest Group (MESIGIG). Neil is Scientific Coordinator of the ENTRUST-PE network, supported by ERA-NET Neuron Cofund, and co-chair of the IASP Global Year 2026 on Neuropathic Pain. 

     

     

    Andrew Rice

    Imperial College London

    Andrew Rice is Professor of Pain Research at Imperial College London and President of the International Association for the Study of Pain (IASP). He earned his medical degree from St. Mary’s Hospital Medical School in 1982 and his research doctorate from St. Thomas’ Hospital Medical School in 1991. Andrew underwent specialist training in Oxford and at St Thomas’ Hospital before joining Imperial College in 1995. He led the Pain Research Group at Imperial College from its inception in 1995 until 2026. His research spans neuropathic pain in infectious diseases (HIV, Herpes Zoster, HTLV-1, leprosy), diabetic neuropathy, and peripheral nerve trauma and amputation, with a focus on improving translational research and evidence synthesis.  

    Andrew chaired the IASP Presidential Task Force on Cannabis and Cannabinoid Analgesia and the Scientific Programme Committee for the 2020 World Congress on Pain. He previously served as an IASP Councilor and was elected President-Elect in 2022. Andrew is an Honorary Consultant in Pain Medicine at Chelsea and Westminster Hospital, stepping aside from clinical practice in 2023 to fulfill his presidential duties. 

    http://www.imperial.ac.uk/people/a.rice

    Mohammad Zunaid

    Bangladesh Civil Service under Ministry of Health & Family Welfare

    Dr. Mohammad Zunaid is an Assistant Professor in Bangladesh Civil Service under Ministry of Health & Family Welfare, Bangladesh. He holds an MBBS, BCS (Health), and MD in Anesthesiology. Mohammad was an IASP Pain Fellow at Siriaj Hospital, Bangkok, Thailand, and serves as a WFSA Mentor in Anaesthesia and Pain. He contributed to Pharmacotherapy and non-invasive neuromodulation for neuropathic pain: a systemic review and meta-analysis as a Co-author. He is a member of the IASP Membership & Chapter Committee and the Presidential Task Force for the Global Year 2027. 

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  • Product not yet rated Contains 1 Component(s)

    Accessible to IASP Members Only!

    image

    With the January 2025 issue of PAIN, the journal began a year-long celebration of its 50th anniversary. 

    This issue is accessible to IASP members only.  


  • New Recording
    Product not yet rated Contains 3 Component(s)

    Join us for the Placebo Beyond Opinions Organized Research Center guest lecture hybrid series presented by Karin Meissner, MD, PhD, Professor of Medicine at Coburg University of Applied Sciences (Germany).

    This webinar is being produced through a collaboration of the IASP's Pain and Placebo Special Interest Group and the University of Maryland, Baltimore, USA - in particular - the University of Maryland School of Nursing's Placebo Beyond Opinions Organized Research Center. Both groups are aligned on advancing unbiased knowledge of placebo effects by promoting interdisciplinary investigation of the placebo phenomenon and nurturing placebo research.

    Please note that this webinar is unique in that it is being hosted (both in-personal and virtually) by the University of Maryland. 

    Join us for the Placebo Beyond Opinions Center guest lecture hybrid series. This lecture on "Placebo and the Body: Psychobiological Pathways of Healing," is presented by Karin Meissner, MD, PhD.

    Meissner is a professor of Integrative Medicine at Coburg University of Applied Sciences and Arts in Germany. Her research bridges placebo science, psychobiology, and mind-body interventions, with a particular focus on the contextual and embodied mechanisms of healing. Meissner's work investigates how expectation, interoception, and body-based practices influence physiological and psychological outcomes in conditions such as pain, nausea, and appetite regulation. Her studies include experimental and clinical trials on open-label placebos, somatic placebo interventions, and psychobiological sex differences in placebo responses. With more than 100 publications, Meissner's work promotes an integrative, evidence-based understanding of how mind and body interact in healing.

    This event will be eligible for CE credits* and is open to the public.

    *If you would like to receive CE credit for attending this webinar, please Register Here

    • Register
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  • New Recording
    Product not yet rated Contains 3 Component(s)

    Presented by IASP

    This webinar was presented on 4 December 2025

    Free to IASP members; Non-members $25 USD

    There are clear benefits to using AI-based chatbots in scientific writing, it can easily improve the writing esp non-native speakers. At the same time, as editors are already facing ever more paper-mills, how are we going to ringfence quality publishing from AI-generated, apparently sound looking work? How will we deal with hundreds, thousands, millions of fabricated articles generated per day?

    Speakers:

    Karen D. Davis, PhD, Editor-in-Chief, PAIN
    Tonya M. Palermo, PhD, Editor-in-Chief, The Journal of Pain

    Moderator:

    Jan Vollert, PhD, University of Exeter

    Karen D. Davis, PhD

    Senior Scientist and Head, Krembil Brain Institute; Professor, University of Toronto

    University Health Network

    Dr. Davis is a senior scientist at the Krembil Brain Institute (University Health Network) and professor at the University of Toronto. Dr. Davis chaired the IASP presidential task force on the use of brain imaging to diagnosis pain and was co-editor of book Pain Neuroethics and Bioethics. She has served on the IASP Council, was a Mayday Fellow, was inducted into the Johns Hopkins Society of Scholars, Canadian Academy of Health Sciences, the Royal Society of Canada, and is a past President of the Canadian Pain Society. Dr. Davis currently serves as the Editor-in-Chief of PAIN.

    Tonya M Palermo, PhD

    Director, Center for Child Health, Behavior and Development; and Professor of Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine

    Seattle Children's Research Institute and University of Washington

    Dr. Tonya Palermo is Professor of Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine at University of Washington and directs an interdisciplinary research center at Seattle Children’s Research Institute dedicated to advancing child and family health. Dr. Palermo has been in Seattle since 2010 where she leads the Pediatric Pain & Sleep Innovations Lab. She is a clinical pediatric psychologist. The focus of her research is on behavioral, psychosocial and family factors that affect pain experiences, the interrelationship of sleep and pain, and innovative psychological treatments for managing and preventing chronic pain. Currently, Dr. Palermo serves as Editor-in-Chief of the Journal of Pain. 

    Jan Vollert, PhD (Moderator)

    Assistant Professor

    University of Exeter

    Dr. Vollert is a chronic pain researcher from Germany, where he did his PhD in neurophysiology at the University of Heidelberg. After six years at Imperial College in London,UK, he has joined the University of Exeter, UK, as a Lecturer (Assistant Professor) in October 2023.

    His background is in data science and statistics, and he collaborates with clinicians across the UK and Europe to analyze multifaceted datasets searching for predictors of developing chronic pain (for example after surgery) and predicting response to treatment to enable personalized pain medicine. He uses a wide array of methods -sensory phenotyping, patient-reported outcomes, -omics – and machine learning to identify mechanistic subgroups.

  • Product not yet rated Contains 3 Component(s)

    Acute Pain SIG

    This webinar took place on 19 November 2025
    Free to IASP Members; $25 USD Non-Members (click here to become an IASP Member)

    Sponsored by the Acute Pain SIG

    The role of opioids in perioperative care remains a subject of active discussion and evolving clinical practice. Across Europe and beyond, clinicians are striving to strike a balance between effective pain management and the prevention of opioid overuse and its long-term consequences. This webinar brings together key perspectives to address both the current state of opioid use in perioperative care and strategies to enhance opioid stewardship. 

    We are pleased to welcome three distinguished speakers who will each address a crucial aspect of this complex topic: 

    • Professor Patrice Forget will open with an overview of opioid use in the perioperative setting across Europe, examining where we currently stand and how clinical practice might be improved. 
    • Dr. Amy Donnelly will follow with a focus on the importance of education for health professionals as a cornerstone of effective opioid stewardship. 
    • Ms. Louise Trewern will provide a powerful and personal perspective on the patient experience, underscoring how lived experience can serve as a key driver for safer, more responsive care. 

    Together, these presentations will offer a comprehensive and multidisciplinary view on opioid stewardship, aiming to inform practice, inspire dialogue, and support meaningful change in perioperative care. 

    This session is tailored for professionals working in pain management, including anesthesiologists, nurses and physiotherapists. The audience will gain practical insights from leading experts and engage in a high-level discussion on optimizing pain relief strategies for these challenging clinical cases. 

    Don’t miss this opportunity to enhance your expertise and connect with fellow professionals in the field. 

    Overall Learning Objectives: 

    By the end of this webinar, participants will be able to: 

    • Describe current patterns and challenges in perioperative opioid use across Europe, and identify potential strategies for improving opioid prescribing practices. 
    • Recognize the role of healthcare professional education in promoting responsible opioid use and implementing effective opioid stewardship programs. 
    • Appreciate the importance of incorporating patient experiences into opioid stewardship efforts to improve outcomes and foster patient-centered care. 

    Patrice Forget, MD PhD

    Clinical Chair in Anesthesia

    University of Aberdeen (UK)

    Patrice Forget, MD PhD, is the clinical chair in anesthesia at the University of Aberdeen (UK), and an honorary consultant at the NHS Grampian. He was previously a clinical professor in Anesthesia and Pain Medicine in Belgium, and the president of the Belgian Pain Society. He is involved in clinical research, focused on mainly pain, perioperative epidemiology, and clinical pharmacology. Over the past few years, as a principal investigator and/or national coordinator, he has published more than 150 articles, letters, or editorials. He is also the chair of the PANDOS (Pain AND Opioids after Surgery) ESAIC Research Group (European Society of Anesthesiology and Intensive Care). 

    Louise Trewern

    Lead Lived Experience Trainer

    Live Well with Pain (UK)

    Louise Trewern is a lived experience advocate who has contributed extensively to improving support for people living with persistent pain. She worked closely with Live Well With Pain, where she helped develop educational resources and shared insights from her own recovery after coming off high-dose prescription opioids. Her work supported others navigating opioid tapering, and she has been a strong advocate for better pain education for the public. Louise promotes self-management approaches that include healthy eating, gentle movement, and reconnecting with life beyond pain. She has served on a number of national committees, including the Physiotherapy Pain Association, and was Vice Chair of the British Pain Society’s Patient Voice Committee. She also contributed to the NICE Guideline Committee NG215 on Medicines Associated with Dependence or Withdrawal, and is a Fellow of the Wolfson Research Institute at Durham University.

    Amy Donnelly, MD

    Consultant Anesthetist

    St. Columcille’s Hospital and St. Vincent’s University Hospital (Ireland)

    Amy Donnelly, MD, a consultant anesthetist in St. Columcille’s Hospital and St. Vincent’s University Hospital in Dublin, Ireland. She obtained her CCST from the College of Anesthesiologists of Ireland in 2020, after which she completed a fellowship in anesthesia in Addenbrooke’s Hospital, Cambridge. She then undertook the first perioperative medicine fellowship in Ireland in St. Vincent’s. Amy is a board member of the Faculty of Pain medicine of Ireland for her work on opioid prescribing in acute pain. She was part of the HSE (Health Service Executive of Ireland) working group for prescribing opioids for acute non-cancer pain. She is currently the FPM board representative on the HSE working group for codeine. Amy was part of the multidisciplinary team involved in the BPS/IPS patient information leaflet on Managing Pain after Surgery. 

    Regina (Rianne) L.M. van Boekel PhD, RN (Moderator)

    Associate Professor at the Department of Anesthesiology, Pain, and Palliative Medicine

    Radboud University Medical Center

    Regina (Rianne) L.M. van Boekel RN, PhD is a skilled nurse, educator, epidemiologist, and researcher. Currently serving as an associate professor at the Department of Anesthesiology, Pain, and Palliative Medicine at Radboud University Medical Center, her research centers on acute postoperative pain management, as well as the prediction pain and pain services.
    Actively engaged in various research projects, Rianne aims to bridge the gap between research and public society. Notable projects include her involvement with the Radboud research team at Lowlands 2016 and the Great National Research on the Sensitivity of Pain in The Netherlands (2017).

    Additionally, Rianne holds a senior research position at the Lectorate Emergency and Critical Health Care of the Knowledge Centre of Sustainable Healthcare, School of Health Studies at HAN University of Applied Sciences. She initiated a two-year post-graduate program for pain nurse consultants at HAN in 2011 and remains actively involved in its development.

    Rianne's commitment to advancing pain nursing is evident through her presidency of the Dutch Association of Pain Nurses from 2015 to 2021, an organization she founded in 2006. Under her leadership, she oversaw the establishment of the Pain Nursing area of expertise and domain within the Nurses’ Quality Register. Furthermore, Rianne collaborated with European colleagues to develop the Core Curriculum for the European Diploma in Pain Nursing, published in 2019. She is also a registrar for the exam.

    Beyond her (inter)national contributions, Rianne served as the president of the multidisciplinary Working Group tasked with preparing the quality indicator Hospital-wide Pain Management for the Healthcare Inspectorate. She also held positions as a board member of the Dutch Pain Society and the Pain Alliance in the Netherlands (P.A.I.N.). Currently, she serves as the president of the SIG Acute Pain of the International Association for the Study of Pain (IASP).

    Recognized for her contributions, Rianne has received numerous personal scholarships and awards. She is a member of several national and international scientific committees, where she provides valuable expertise and guidance.

    Felicia Cox (Moderator)

    Nurse Consultant

    Felicia Cox, FRCN, is a nurse consultant in pain management. She is a past chair of the Royal College of Nursing (RCN) Pain and Palliative Care Forum and is a co-opted member of the Council of the British Pain Society. She is a committee member of the EFIC Covid Task Force and EFIC Research Strategy group, the IASP Acute Pain Special Interest Group, and a founding member of the Pain Nurse Network. She is the co-editor of the British Journal of Pain. The breadth of her pain-related publications spans the continuum from the Daily Telegraph toThe Lancet with systematic reviews, chapters, and books in between. She has also co-authored e-learning modules on pain and medicine safety, and has contributed to several Family Practice Management publications. She is an honorary lecturer at King’s College London, UK, and has been awarded honorary membership of the British Pain Society and Fellowship of the RCN for her services to pain. Her clinical and research interests include chronic postsurgical pain and procedural pain, and enjoys supporting novice authors to publish and disseminate their work. 

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    Presented by the Pain and Trauma SIG

    This webinar took place on Thursday 13 November 2025

    Free to IASP Members; $25.00 for non-members

    In the opening part of this webinar, Fríða Pálsdóttir from Iceland will share how her trauma-informed approach in physiotherapy is rooted in the polyvagal theory. Next, Indra Majore-Dūšele from Latvia will give theoretical accounts on Mindfulness-based Dance Movement Therapy (MBDMT). MBDMT intervention was created to address the psycho-emotional difficulties (anxiety, depression, catastrophizing, fear of movement) of chronic pain patients and to develop self-regulation skills. She will then present the results from her current randomized-controlled trial comparing 5 weeks of intense MBDMT to care as usual. Iris Trinkler will round up the seminar. Her recent study focused on body, emotions, pain and relationship experiences in women having suffered violence. She will be discussing the role of the body in emotion regulation and how body and dance therapies might tap into affect attunement and, through a dyadic, interpersonal process, help the patient overcome suffering.

    Speakers:

    Fríða Pálsdóttir, BSC

    Indra Majore-Dūšele, PhD cand, MA.Psych., MA

    Iris Trinkler, PhD HDR

    Indra Majore-Dūšele

    PhD cand, MA Psych., MA Health Care, psychologist and MBDMT therapist, Riga Stradins University, Latvia

    Department of Health Psychology and Pedagogy, Faculty of Public Health and Social Welfare

    Indra is a psychologist and psychotherapist for 25 years, and a MBDMT therapist and trainer for 10 years.  

    Mindfulness based Dance Movement Therapy intervention for chronic pain patient’s self-regulation: results from RCT. 

    The Mindfulness based Dance Movement Therapy (MBDMT) intervention was created to address the psycho-emotional difficulties (anxiety, depression, catastrophizing, fear of movement) of chronic pain patients and to develop self-regulation skills. The model on which MBDMT is based was created using grounded theory, then adapted in a pilot study and applied in a randomized controlled trial for chronic pain patients. An intervention group participated in a 10 session DMT process over a 5-week period. In the webinar results from the RCT will be presented: comparison between the intervention and control group with regards to outcome (pain, anxiety and depression) and process (emotion regulation skills and body awareness). Further, the therapeutic mechanisms of the MBDMT model will be discussed.  

     

    Fríða Pálsdóttir, BSC

    BSC, physical therapist, University Hospital Reykjavík, Iceland

    Psychiatry Department of Landspítali

    Fríða is a practicing physical therapist for 10 years, specializing in pain for 8 years, and diving into trauma and pain 6 years ago.  

    A polyvagal theory account of trauma-informed physiotherapy in trauma and chronic pain patients 

    The polyvagal theory originated in the description of two complementary vagal pathways, dorsal and ventral, of which the latter is phylogenetically younger and plays an important role in the recovery from trauma. I will introduce the polyvagal theory, from its origin, the biology behind it, and the questions it sought to answer in the 1970‘s and 1980‘s into how it can be applied to assessment and treatment of people with chronic pain and trauma. I will examine clinical presentations i am frequently faced with in my physiotherapy practice and walk through how the polyvagal theory helps me and my clients make sense of their experience and enhance their treatment. 

    Iris Trinkler

    PhD HDR, neuroscientist, Strasbourg University, France

    Iris is a neuroscientist whose research specializes in empathy, emotion recognition and regulation and the role of dance in (neuro)rehabilitation 

    Body (re)affiliation or the double role of the body and movement work in trauma-informed pain rehabilitation 

    Based on Fríða’s and Indra’s presentations and backed up by interviews with women having suffered violence on body, emotions, pain and relationships, Iris will round up the seminar by discussing the role of the body in emotion regulation and how body and dance therapies might tap into affect attunement and through a dyadic, interpersonal process help the patient overcome suffering.   

    Clair Jacobs, MSc (Moderator)

    Vice-Chair of Pain and Trauma SIG

    .INPUT Pain Management, St Thomas’s NHS trust

    Clair works clinically as Physiotherapy Clinical Lead at INPUT Pain Management, Guys and St Thomas NHS Trust alongside Pain and Leadership teaching both in the Physiotherapy Division at Brunel University and External as Sen. Lecturer (Professional Practice) Physiotherapy. Clair has worked in chronic pain management for most of her career in secondary and tertiary service including overseas. She is interested in psychologically informed and narrative approaches in health care graduating in Narrative Medicine, Columbia University and Narrative Based Approaches. She is serving on national and International committees including Co-Chair of the Physiotherapy Pain Association and Co-Education Lead since 2019 and Vice-Chair of Pain and Trauma SIG, IASP (previously Pain of Torture, Organized Violence, and War SIG).

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    Abdominal and Pelvic Pain

    This webinar took place on 5 November 2025 

    Free to IASP members; Non-members $25 USD

    Pain researchers have now come to some consensus regarding the existence of sex/gender differences in the sensitivity to and tolerance of pain in humans. In addition and more importantly, evidence is rapidly emerging that the sexes may differ qualitatively in their biological mediation of pain and analgesia. That is, different genetic factors, neural circuits, neuromodulators, and immune cells may be relevant to pain processing in males and females. I will make the case for the importance of sex-as-a-biological-variable policies as they pertain to pain, and then present several research stories suggestive of fundamental sex dimorphism in pain processing, the effects of pain on mortality, and the interaction between pain and social behaviour.

    Speaker:  Jeffrey S. Mogill, PhD, FCAHS, FRSC, Professor, McGill University

    Moderator: Natalie Osborne

    Jeffrey S. Mogill, PhD, FCAHS, FRSC

    Professor

    McGill University, Montreal, Canada

    Jeffrey S. Mogil is the E.P. Taylor Professor of Pain Studies and a Distinguished James McGill Professor at McGill University, where he formerly directed the Alan Edwards Centre for Research on Pain. He earned a B.Sc. (Honours) in Psychology from the University of Toronto (1988) and a Ph.D. in Neuroscience from UCLA (1993), completed a postdoctoral fellowship in Portland, Oregon (1993–1996), joined the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign faculty, and moved to McGill in 2001. A Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada and the Canadian Academy of Health Sciences, Dr. Mogil is renowned for seminal work in pain genetics, sex differences in pain and analgesia, and algesiometric testing in mice; he authored landmark reviews and edited the first textbook in the field, The Genetics of Pain (IASP Press, 2004). He has published 270+ papers and chapters since 1992, delivered nearly 400 invited lectures, holds an h-index of 100 (Google Scholar), and his work has been cited 40,000+ times; a 2022 Stanford analysis ranked him 7th in Anesthesiology and 210th in Neuroscience worldwide. His research has been supported by NIH, CIHR, NSERC, and leading foundations; current support includes a CIHR Foundation Grant, NSERC Discovery Grant, CIHR Sex and Gender Science Chair, and LAEF. Honors include major awards from IASP, CPS, and APS. He has served as Section Editor (Neurobiology) for Pain, chaired the 13th World Congress on Pain Scientific Planning Committee, sat on the IASP Council, and founded the North American Pain School.

    Natalie Osborne, PhD (Moderator)

    Postdoctoral Research Fellow

    University of Chicago Pritzker School of Medicine

    Natalie Osborne, PhD is a Postdoctoral Research Fellow in the Gynecology Research Lab at Endeavor Health and Clinician Researcher at the University of Chicago Pritzker School of Medicine. She combines neuroimaging with psychophysical testing to understand how menstrual pain influences the brain as well as future chronic pain risk in adolescents and adults. Natalie completed her PhD under the supervision of Dr. Karen Davis at the University of Toronto, where she studied sex-differences in the brains of people with chronic pain and their response to treatment.