
Opioid Stewardship in Perioperative Care: Practice, Education, and Patient Perspectives
Includes a Live Web Event on 11/19/2025 at 4:00 PM (EST)
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19 November 2025 at 4:00 p.m. EST
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 to The 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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