Plenary Sessions |
Parallel Sessions |
Industry Satellite Symposia | Society Meetings |
Poster Viewing Sessions |
Time | Session |
10:45 – 11:00 | Coffee |
11:00 – 12:30 | Talk 1: Pain Management Programmes: Where are we now.Patrick Hill (11:00-11:30)Talk 2: Supporting young people with Persistent pain and fatigue.Greg Hobbs & Sarah White (11:30-12:00)Talk 3: Sleeping Better with Chronic Pain: Using CBTi with chronic pain patients.Nicole Tang (12:00-12:30) |
12:30 – 13:15 | Lunch Break |
13:15 – 15:15 | WorkshopsWorkshop Title: Reviewing Pain Management Programme design.An opportunity to reflect and discuss the design, implementation and effectiveness of your PMPs with your peers, in light of contemporary evidence and thinking.Facilitators: Patrick Hill and Hazel O’Dowd Clinical Psychologists North Bristol NHS Trust.Workshop Title: Implementing the Young Person’s Pathway for pain and fatigue.Designing a group-based intervention using the DNA-V model.Facilitators: Sarah White, Mandy Buckley, Caroline Neal Nottinghamshire Community Pain Pathway. |
15:15 – 15:30 | Coffee Break |
15:30 – 17:00 | Keynote Speaker |
Hall A |
Hall B |
HALL C |
HALL D |
|
11:00 – 11:15 |
Welcome |
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11:15 – 11:55 |
Plenary Session 1 BPS LectureChair: Roger KnaggsWhere does psychology belong in pain management?, Amanda Williams |
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11:55 – 12:00 |
BREAK |
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12:00 – 13:20 |
Parallel Session A1 Pain Assessment Across the LifespanChair: Felicia Cox, UKBiopsychosocial assessment of pain in children: beyond pain intensity, Sueellen Walker, UKThe development of a pain assessment tool for people with a Learning Disability, Vicky Sandy-Davis, UKPain is what the patient says it is, but what if they cannot say, Patricia Schofield, UK |
Parallel Session A2 Distinct Phenotypes and Mechanisms of Pain in Fibromyalgia SyndromeChair: Shafaq Sikandar, UKNeutrophil mediated sensitization of dorsal root ganglia neurons in FMS, Shafaq Sikandar, UKThe role of the microbiome in fibromyalgia syndrome, Amir MInerbi, Israel Small nerve fibers and microRNAs in FMS – promising paths to better diagnostics and treatment? Nurcan Uçeyler, Germany |
Parallel Session A3 Pain and Suicide: Exploring Risk Factors, Opioid Use and Potential Targets for InterventionChair: Nicole Tang, UKPain and Mental defeat: Insights into Suicide Risk, Kristy Themelis, UKThe role of self-compassion in chronic pain and mental health outcomes, Jenna L. Gillett, UKPain, Opioids and Suicide: Have we gone too far? Martin D. Cheatle, USA |
Parallel Session A4 Pain Following Major Traumatic Injury: Lessons Learnt From Military ContextsChair: Harriet Kemp, UKPain Following Combat Injury, Alex Kumar, UKPain and Musculoskeletal Injury, Fraje Watson, UKPain following Major Traumatic Injuries in Civilian Populations, Harriet Kemp, UK |
13:20 – 14:00 |
SIG Business MeetingsPain Management Programmes SIG |
SIG Business MeetingAcute Pain SIG |
LUNCH BREAK / POSTER VIEWING / EXHIBITION |
|
14:00 – 15:20 |
Parallel Session B1 Beyond Tokenistic Involvement: Working with Patient and Public Contributors in Pain ResearchChair: Ian Taverner, UKEmbedding public contribution in pain research from the start, Carolyn Chew-Graham OBE, UKUsing peoples’ life stories to drive the investigation of long-term causal pain pathways, Charlotte Woolley, UKIdentifying, Engaging and Involving People Living with Pain with Diverse Backgrounds: A Role for Patient Ambassadors, Louise Trewern, UK & Sarah Harrisson, UK |
Parallel Session B2 Pain Across the Continuum of CancerChair: Sam H Ahmedzai, UKCharacterising the phenotype of neuropathic pain in cancer patients, Matthew Mulvey,UKLooking for biomarkers and genetic predictors of pain in cancer patients, Paul Farquhar-Smith, UKNew therapies, new pains: the two faces of targeted biologics and CAR-T approaches, Jennifer Vidrine, UK |
Parallel Session B3 Making Time to Talk About PainChair: Cathy Stannard, UKGetting pain to the top of the agenda, Di Aitken, UKPrimary Care Group Consultations for people with Chronic Pain, Barbara Phipps, UKEvolution of a whole system approach to supporting people to live well with pain, Cathy Stannard, UK |
Parallel Session B4 Interventional Pain Medicine How to best practice in RFChair: Cathy Price, UKRF – Lumbar, Cathy Price, UK RF – Cervical, Ganesan Baranidharan, UK RF- Knee, Robin Correa, UK RF – Hip or SIJ, Vivek Mehta, UK RF – Shoulder, Thomas Haag,UK |
15:20 – 16:20 |
Attended Poster Viewing Session (Odd Numbers) with Coffee Break |
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16:20 – 17:20 |
Industry Satellite Symposia 1 |
SIG Business MeetingsPain in Older People SIG |
SIG Business MeetingsMedicolegal SIG |
SIG Business MeetingsPrimary & Community Care SIG |
17:20 – 18:30 |
Plenary Session 2 Visceral PainChair: Katy VincentPills ‘n’ Thrills and Bellyaches; What Causes Abdominal Pain in Gastrointestinal Disease, David Bulmer, UK Other Peas in the Pod: Abdominal pain in GI disorders is not an isolated story, Rona Moss-Morris, UK |
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18:30 – 20:00 |
Welcome Reception Exhibition Area |
Hall A |
Hall B |
HALL C |
HALL D |
|
08:00 – 09:00 |
Industry Satellite Symposia 2 |
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09:00 – 09:10 |
BREAK |
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09:10 – 10:20 |
Plenary Session 3 Women’s HealthChair: Ed KeoghPelvic Mesh, Sohier Elneil, UKEndometriosis-associated pain: why we need to move the focus away from endometriosis and onto pain, Katy Vincent, UK |
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10:20 – 11:20 |
AGM |
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11:20 – 11:50 |
COFFEE BREAK / POSTER VIEWING / EXHIBITION |
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11:50 – 13:10 |
Parallel Session C1 Why Don’t Gabapentinoids Work for Everyone?Chair: Paul Farquhar-Smith, UKWhat is the evidence for gabapentinoids in acute and chronic pain?, Mahindra Chincholkar, UK Why don’t gabapentoids work for all? A scientific explanation, Tony Dickenson, UK Mirogabalin: is there hope for gabapentinoids?, Paul Farquhar-Smith, UK |
Parallel Session C2 Getting Started in ResearchChair: Felicia Cox, UKThe POPPY Study – Patient reported Outcomes, postoperative Pain and Pain relief in day case surgery-& the RAFT network, Adam Brayne, UK An overview of the PANDOS study, how to get buy in from local teams, Partice Forget, UK Getting started in research – An interactive discussion, Gary Macfarlane, UK |
Parallel Session C3 Current Methodologies to Support the Study of Chronic Pain and Its Psycho-social Dynamics in Naturalistic SettingsChair: Diego Vitali, UKBringing lab-tech in the wild: limitations and benefits of using wearable sensors to study chronic pain in naturalistic settings, Diego Vitali, UK Overview of AI approaches for addressing challenges relevant to automatic recognition of levels of pain and related constructs, Temitayo Olugbade, UK Designing a Virtual Reality intervention for chronic pain; challenges and consideration, Emma Fisher, UK |
Parallel Session C4 Rethinking Pain: Collaborative Working Across the Clinical, Voluntary and Community Sector to Provide Person-centered Pain CareChair: Mark I. Johnson, UKRationale for greater collaborative working across the clinical, voluntary and community sector, Mark I. Johnson, UK Development & delivery of the Rethinking Pain Programme – system change to address the needs of diverse communities in Bradford District & Craven, Kerry Page, UK Evaluation of system change and the Rethinking Pain programme – Theory of Change and findings from an independent evaluation, Kate Thompson, UK |
13:10 – 14:30 |
LUNCH BREAK / POSTER VIEWING / EXHIBITION |
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13:10 – 14:30 |
Early Careers Networking Event |
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13:30 – 14:30 |
Industry Satellite Symposia 3 |
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14:30 – 15:40 |
Plenary Session 4 Markers of Persistent PainChair: Kirsty BannisterAcute to Chronic Pain Transmission: Mechanisms and Biomarkers, Kathleen SlukaPsychosocial risk factors for persistent pain: What can population based epidemiological studies tell us?, John McBeth |
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15:40 – 16:40 |
Best Poster Oral PresentationsChair: Edmund KeoghA Service Evaluation of a Novel Persistent Perioperative Pain Pathway at St Bartholomew’s Hospital, Masseh Yakubi, UKUK BioBank Participants Carrying SCN9A Rare Variants Implicated in Inherited Neuropathic Pain Show No Increase in Pain or Analgesic Prescriptions, Graeme W T Newton, UK PICK1 inhibitors relieve ongoing and evoked hypersensitivity in multiple mouse models of pain in female and male mice with cross-laboratory validation, Kathrine Louise Jensen, DenmarkSenseCheQ: Leaping out of the Lab to the Home Environment for Patient-Centred Quantitative Sensory Testing, Johannes Gausden, UK Dysmenorrhea and chronic pain at midlife: evidence from the UK National Child Development Study, Catherine Borra, UK The effectiveness of an aerobic exercise on patients with chronic neck pain during a short and long-term follow up: A randomized control trail, Amira Daher Daher, Israel |
Practical Clinical Hypnosis for PainHosted by the Philosophy and Ethics Special Interest Group of the BPSChair: Maureen Tilford, UKClinical Hypnosis in obstetrics, painful procedures and neuropathy, Amelia van Manen, UK Clinical Hypnosis in Oncology, Sarah Patridge, UK Uses of Clinical Hypnosis from the Viewpoint of a Paediatric Anaesthetist, Caron Moores, UK |
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16:40 – 17:10 |
COFFEE BREAK / POSTER VIEWING / EXHIBITION |
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17:10 – 18:20 |
Plenary Session 5 BPS DebateChair: Cathy Price |
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18:20 – 19:20 |
SIG Business MeetingInterventional Pain Medicine SIG |
BJP Editorial Board Meeting |
SIG Business Meeting |
Hall A |
Hall B |
HALL C |
HALL D |
|
08:30 – 09:30 |
Industry Satellite Symposia 4 |
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09:30 – 10:40 |
Plenary Session 6 Barriers to Accessing Pain Management ServicesChair: Felicia Cox, UKHow political understanding(s) can shape pain care, Jackie WalumbeHow can we tackle inequalities in chronic pain care? – a GP perspective, David Blane |
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10:40 – 11:10 |
BREAK |
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11:10 – 12:10 |
Oral Poster Presentations 1Chair: Nicole TangThe Effect of Psychological Interventions on Neck Pain and Disability in Patients with Whiplash. Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis, Mohammad Al Wardat, JordanPro-inflammatory Dietary Intake Relates to Pain Sensitivity in Chronic Non-Specific Low Back Pain: A Case-Control Study, Omer Elma, UKPredictors for quality of life in patients with chronic pain: a longitudinal study using regression and mixed effect modelling, Thomas Bilterys, UK Medical cannabis for chronic pain in the UK: an 18-month longitudinal observational study of 1993 individuals enrolled in Project Twenty21, Andrew Lambarth, UK Evaluating pain scores and clinical outcomes of serratus anterior plane blocks vs systemic analgesia of trauma patients with rib fractures, Divakar B Hamal, UK |
Oral Poster Presentations 2Chair: Sam AhmedzaiChildhood maltreatment increases risk of chronic pain all over: counterfactual analysis of UK Biobank, Gary J. Macfarlane, UKSelf-regulation: a potential barrier to positive health behaviour change in Psoriatic Arthritis, Helen Jane Buckle, UKWill ageing perception and social relationships moderate the influence of health stressors on life satisfaction of the very old adults?, Abigail Olubola Taiwo, UK Quantifying pain impact in two longitudinal cohort studies: ALSPAC and ELSA, Amanda Ly, UK Gynaecological histories and chronic pain: ethnographic findings from a study of peri-menopause, Catherine Borra, UK |
Oral Poster Presentations 3Chair: Cathy PriceEffect of caudal block on surgical stress response in pediatric population, Mostafa Somri, Israel Differential modulation of spinal somatosensory-evoked potentials / wide dynamic range neuronal activity by lacosamide, pregabalin and tapentadol, Kenneth A J Steel, UK ART26.12, a novel Fatty Acid-Binding Protein 5 inhibitor, shows efficacy in breast cancer-induced bone pain, Saoirse Elizabeth Osullivan, UK The effects of the Fatty Acid Binding Protein 5 inhibitor ART26.12 in a rat model of diabetic neuropathy, Saoirse Elizabeth Osullivan, UK Development of type-1 diabetes changes in evoked & non-evoked neuropathic pain endpoints and reversal with pregabalin in the rat streptozotocin model, Michael T Lanigan, UK |
|
12:10 – 13:40 |
LUNCH BREAK / POSTER VIEWING / EXHIBITION |
12:30 – 13:30How can basic scientists, healthcare professionals and patients work together for the advancement of BPS?Chair: Sam H Ahmedzai, UKThe 2022 BPS TPVC national survey of public experience of UK pain services – benefits and weaknesses, Sam H Ahmedzai, UK Basic scientists engaging with patients leads to better fundamental research strategies, Kirsty Bannister, UKThe TPVC 2023 strategy and how it can help BPS achieve its aims, Victoria Abbot-Fleming & Tim Atkinson |
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12:40 – 13:40 Attended Poster Viewing Session (Even Numbers) |
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13:40 – 15:00 |
Parallel Session D1 APDP David WalshChair: Edmund Keogh,UKAmanda WilliamsLesley Colvin |
Parallel Session D2 Opioids After Surgery, Prescribing and De-prescribing. Why and How?Chair: Felicia Cox, UKWhat do we know about opioid use after surgery?, Patrice Forget, UK What about patients’ opinions and perspectives about opioids after surgery?, Dalia Aljohani, UK How to personalise postoperative pain management during the acute and subacute phases?, Esther Pogatzki-Zahn, Germany |
Parallel Session D3 Approach to Migraine Treatments: Who, When and WhyChair: Vivek Mehta, UK & Anna Andreou, UKApproach to the treatment of migraine: What to prescribe and when, Modar Khalil, UK Neuromodulation techniques in migraine: What is the current role?, Kavita Poply, UK The UK National Migraine Registry and Audit Tool, Anna Andreou, UK |
Parallel Session D4 Basic ScienceDissecting Mechanisms that Underlie the Pain Experience Using Novel ApproachesChair: Kirsty Bannister, UKHow does the nervous system handle pain throughout life? Neuroplasticity in the developing and aging nervous system and the role of opioids in shaping pain experience, Gareth Hathway, UK Developing better translational biomarkers of activity in nociceptive circuits, Tony Pickering, UK The role of soluble epoxide hydrolase in regulating inflammation and pain: opportunities for novel analgesic strategies, Victoria Chapman, UK |
15:00 – 15:40 |
Plenary Session 7 Pat Wall LectureChair: Roger KnaggsPain : finding positives in the Wall of negatives, Tony Pickering, UK |
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15:40 – 16:00 |
Poster Awards & Closing Ceremony |
Hall A |
|
11:00 – 11:15 |
Welcome |
11:15 – 11:55 |
Plenary Session 1 BPS Lecture Chair: Roger KnaggsWhere does psychology belong in pain management?, Amanda Williams |
11:55 – 12:00 |
BREAK |
12:00 – 13:20 |
Parallel Session A1 Pain Assessment Across the Lifespan Chair: Felicia Cox, UKBiopsychosocial assessment of pain in children: beyond pain intensity, Suellen Walker, UKThe development of a pain assessment tool for people with a Learning Disability, Vicky Sandy-Davis, UKPain is what the patient says it is, but what if they cannot say, Patricia Schfield, UK |
13:20 – 14:00 |
Pain Management Programmes SIG Meeting |
LUNCH BREAK / POSTER VIEWING / EXHIBITION |
|
14:00 – 15:20 |
Parallel Session B1 Beyond Tokenistic Involvement: Working with Patient and Public Contributors in Pain Research Chair: Ian Taverner, UKEmbedding public contribution in pain research from the start, Carolyn Chew-Graham OBE, UKUsing peoples’ life stories to drive the investigation of long-term causal pain pathways, Charlotte Woolley, UKIdentifying, Engaging and Involving People Living with Pain with Diverse Backgrounds: A Role for Patient Ambassadors, Louise Trewern, UK & Sarah Harrisson, UK |
15:20 – 16:20 |
Attended Poster Viewing Session (Odd Numbers) with Coffee Break |
16:20 – 17:20 |
Industry Satellite Symposia 1 |
17:20 – 18:30 |
Plenary Session 2 Visceral PainPills ‘n’ Thrills and Bellyaches; What Causes Abdominal Pain in Gastrointestinal Disease, David Bulmer Rona Moss-Morris |
18:30 – 20:00 |
Welcome Reception Exhibition Area |
Hall B |
|
11:00 – 11:15 |
|
11:15 – 11:55 |
|
11:55 – 12:00 |
BREAK |
12:00 – 13:20 |
Parallel Session A2 Distinct Phenotypes and Mechanisms of Pain in Fibromyalgia Syndrome Chair: Shafaq Sikandar, UKNeutrophil mediated sensitization of dorsal root ganglia neurons in FMS, Shafaq Sikandar, UKThe role of the microbiome in fibromyalgia syndrome, Amir MInerbi, Israel Small nerve fibers and microRNAs in FMS – promising paths to better diagnostics and treatment? Nurcan Uçeyler, Germany |
13:20 – 14:00 |
SIG Business Meeting Acute Pain SIG |
14:00 – 15:20 |
Parallel Session B2 Pain Across the Continuum of Cancer Chair: Sam H Ahmedzai, UKCharacterising the phenotype of neuropathic pain in cancer patients, Matthew Mulvey,UKLooking for biomarkers and genetic predictors of pain in cancer patients, Paul Farquhar-Smith, UKNew therapies, new pains: the two faces of targeted biologics and CAR-T approaches, Jennifer Vidrine, UK |
15:20 – 16:20 |
Attended Poster Viewing Session (Odd Numbers) with Coffee Break |
16:20 – 17:20 |
SIG Business MeetingsPain in Older People SIG |
17:20 – 18:30 |
|
18:30 – 20:00 |
Welcome Reception Exhibition Area |
HALL C |
|
11:00 – 11:15 |
|
11:15 – 11:55 |
|
11:55 – 12:00 |
BREAK |
12:00 – 13:20 |
Parallel Session A3 Pain and Suicide: Exploring Risk Factors, Opioid Use and Potential Targets for Intervention Chair: Nicole Tang, UKPain and Mental defeat: Insights into Suicide Risk, Kristy Themelis, UKThe role of self-compassion in chronic pain and mental health outcomes, Jenna L. Gillett, UKPain, Opioids and Suicide: Have we gone too far? Martin D. Cheatle, USA |
13:20 – 14:00 |
LUNCH BREAK / POSTER VIEWING / EXHIBITION |
14:00 – 15:20 |
Parallel Session B3 Making Time to Talk About Pain Chair: Cathy Stannard, UKGetting pain to the top of the agenda, Di Aitken, UKPrimary Care Group Consultations for people with Chronic Pain, Barbara Phipps, UKEvolution of a whole system approach to supporting people to live well with pain, Cathy Stannard, UK |
15:20 – 16:20 |
Attended Poster Viewing Session (Odd Numbers) with Coffee Break |
16:20 – 17:20 |
SIG Business MeetingsMedicolegal SIG |
17:20 – 18:30 |
|
18:30 – 20:00 |
Welcome ReceptionExhibition Area |
HALL D |
|
11:00 – 11:15 |
|
11:15 – 11:55 |
|
11:55 – 12:00 |
BREAK |
12:00 – 13:20 |
Parallel Session A4 Pain Following Major Traumatic Injury: Lessons Learnt From Military Contexts Chair: Harriet Kemp, UKPain Following Combat Injury, Alex Kumar, UKPain and Musculoskeletal Injury, Fraje Watson, UKPain following Major Traumatic Injuries in Civilian Populations, Harriet Kemp, UK |
13:20 – 14:00 |
Pain Management Programmes |
SIG Meeting LUNCH BREAK / POSTER VIEWING / EXHIBITION |
|
14:00 – 15:20 |
Parallel Session B4 Interventional Pain Medicine |
15:20 – 16:20 |
Attended Poster Viewing Session (Odd Numbers) with Coffee Break |
16:20 – 17:20 |
SIG Business Meetings |
17:20 – 18:30 |
|
18:30 – 20:00 |
Welcome ReceptionExhibition Area |
Hall A |
|
08:00 – 09:00 |
Industry Satellite Symposia 2 |
09:00 – 09:10 |
BREAK |
09:10 – 10:20 |
Plenary Session 3 Women’s HealthPelvic Mesh, Sohier Elneil |
10:20 – 11:20 |
AGM |
11:20 – 11:50 |
COFFEE BREAK / POSTER VIEWING / EXHIBITION |
11:50 – 13:10 |
Parallel Session C1 Why Don’t Gabapentinoids Work for Everyone?Chair: Paul Farquhar-Smith, UKWhat is the evidence for gabapentinoids in acute and chronic pain?, Mahindra Chincholkar, UK Why don’t gabapentoids work for all? A scientific explanation, Tony Dickenson, UK Mirogabalin: is there hope for gabapentinoids?, Paul Farquhar-Smith, UK |
13:10 – 14:30 |
LUNCH BREAK / POSTER VIEWING / EXHIBITION |
13:30 – 14:30 |
Industry Satellite Symposia 3 |
14:30 – 15:40 |
Plenary Session 4 Markers of Persistent PainKathleen SlukaJohn McBeth |
15:40 – 16:40 |
Best Poster Oral PresentationsChair: Edmund Keogh |
16:40 – 17:10 |
COFFEE BREAK / POSTER VIEWING / EXHIBITION |
17:10 – 18:20 |
Plenary Session 5 BPS Debate |
18:20 – 19:20 |
SIG Business MeetingInterventional Pain Medicine SIG |
18:30 – 20:00 |
2. Social Event |
Hall B | |
08:00 – 09:00 |
|
09:00 – 09:10 |
BREAK |
09:10 – 10:20 |
|
10:20 – 11:20 |
|
11:20 – 11:50 |
COFFEE BREAK / POSTER VIEWING / EXHIBITION |
11:50 – 13:10 |
Parallel Session C2 Getting Started in ResearchChair: Felicia Cox, UKThe POPPY Study – Patient reported Outcomes, postoperative Pain and Pain relief in day case surgery-& the RAFT network, Adam Brayne, UK An overview of the PANDOS study, how to get buy in from local teams, Partice Forget, UK Getting started in research – An interactive discussion, Gary Macfarlane, UK |
13:10 – 14:30 |
LUNCH BREAK / POSTER VIEWING / EXHIBITION |
13:30 – 14:30 |
Early Careers Networking Event |
14:30 – 15:40 |
|
15:40 – 16:40 |
Practical Clinical Hypnosis for PainHosted by the Philosophy and Ethics Special Interest Group of the BPSChair: Maureen Tilford, UK Clinical Hypnosis in obstetrics, painful procedures and neuropathy, Amelia van Manen, UK Clinical Hypnosis in Oncology, Sarah Patridge, UK Uses of Clinical Hypnosis from the Viewpoint of a Paediatric Anaesthetist, Caron Moores, UK |
16:40 – 17:10 |
COFFEE BREAK / POSTER VIEWING / EXHIBITION |
17:10 – 18:20 |
|
18:20 – 19:20 |
SIG Business Meeting |
18:30 – 20:00 |
2. Social Event |
HALL C |
|
08:00 – 09:00 |
|
09:00 – 09:10 |
BREAK |
09:10 – 10:20 |
|
10:20 – 11:20 |
|
11:20 – 11:50 |
COFFEE BREAK / POSTER VIEWING / EXHIBITION |
11:50 – 13:10 |
Parallel Session C3 Current Methodologies to Support the Study of Chronic Pain and Its Psycho-social Dynamics in Naturalistic SettingsChair: Diego Vitali, UK Bringing lab-tech in the wild: limitations and benefits of using wearable sensors to study chronic pain in naturalistic settings, Diego Vitali, UK Overview of AI approaches for addressing challenges relevant to automatic recognition of levels of pain and related constructs, Temitayo Olugbade, UK Designing a Virtual Reality intervention for chronic pain; challenges and consideration, Emma Fisher, UK |
13:10 – 14:30 |
LUNCH BREAK / POSTER VIEWING / EXHIBITION |
13:30 – 14:30 |
|
14:30 – 15:40 |
|
15:40 – 16:40 |
|
16:40 – 17:10 |
COFFEE BREAK / POSTER VIEWING / EXHIBITION |
17:10 – 18:20 |
|
18:20 – 19:20 |
SIG Business Meeting |
18:30 – 20:00 |
2. Social Event |
HALL D |
|
08:00 – 09:00 |
|
09:00 – 09:10 |
BREAK |
09:10 – 10:20 |
|
10:20 – 11:20 |
|
11:20 – 11:50 |
COFFEE BREAK / POSTER VIEWING / EXHIBITION |
11:50 – 13:10 |
Parallel Session C4 Rethinking Pain: Collaborative Working Across the Clinical, Voluntary and Community Sector to Provide Person-centered Pain CareChair: Mark I. Johnson, UK Rationale for greater collaborative working across the clinical, voluntary and community sector, Mark I. Johnson, UK Development & delivery of the Rethinking Pain Programme – system change to address the needs of diverse communities in Bradford District & Craven, Kerry Page, UK Evaluation of system change and the Rethinking Pain programme – Theory of Change and findings from an independent evaluation, Kate Thompson, UK |
13:10 – 14:30 |
LUNCH BREAK / POSTER VIEWING / EXHIBITION |
13:30 – 14:30 |
How can basic scientists, healthcare professionals and patients work together for the advancement of BPS?Chair: Sam H Ahmedzai, UK The 2022 BPS TPVC national survey of public experience of UK pain services – benefits and weaknesses, Sam H Ahmedzai, UK Basic scientists engaging with patients leads to better fundamental research strategies, Kirsty Bannister, UK The TPVC 2023 strategy and how it can help BPS achieve its aims, Victoria Abbot-Fleming & Tim Atkinson |
14:30 – 15:40 |
|
15:40 – 16:40 |
|
16:40 – 17:10 |
COFFEE BREAK / POSTER VIEWING / EXHIBITION |
17:10 – 18:20 |
|
18:20 – 19:20 |
SIG Business Meeting |
Hall A |
|
08:30 – 09:30 |
Industry Satellite Symposia 4 |
09:30 – 10:40 |
Plenary Session 6 Barriers to Accessing Pain Management Services Chair: Felicia Cox, UKJackie Walumbe David Blane |
10:40 – 11:10 |
BREAK |
11:10 – 12:10 |
Oral Poster Presentations 1 |
12:10 – 13:40 |
LUNCH BREAK / POSTER VIEWING / EXHIBITION |
12:40 – 13:40 Attended Poster Viewing Session (Even Numbers) |
|
13:40 – 15:00 |
Parallel Session D1
APDP
|
15:00 – 15:40 |
Plenary Session 7 Pat Wall Lecture Chair: Roger KnaggsTony Pickering |
15:40 – 16:00 |
Poster Awards & Closing Ceremony |
Hall B |
|
08:30 – 09:30 |
|
09:30 – 10:40 |
|
10:40 – 11:10 |
BREAK |
11:10 – 12:10 |
Oral Poster Presentations 2 |
12:10 – 13:40 |
LUNCH BREAK / POSTER VIEWING / EXHIBITION |
12:40 – 13:40 Attended Poster Viewing Session (Even Numbers) |
|
13:40 – 15:00 |
Parallel Session D2
Opioids After Surgery, Prescribing and De-prescribing. Why and How?
|
15:00 – 15:40 |
|
15:40 – 16:00 |
HALL C |
|
08:30 – 09:30 |
|
09:30 – 10:40 |
|
10:40 – 11:10 |
BREAK |
11:10 – 12:10 |
Oral Poster Presentations 3 |
12:10 – 13:40 |
LUNCH BREAK / POSTER VIEWING / EXHIBITION |
12:40 – 13:40 Attended Poster Viewing Session (Even Numbers) |
|
13:40 – 15:00 |
Parallel Session D3 Approach to Migraine Treatments: Who, When and Why Chair: Vivek Mehta, UK & Anna Andreou, UKApproach to the treatment of migraine: What to prescribe and when, Modar Khalil, UK Neuromodulation techniques in migraine: What is the current role?, Kavita Poply, UK The UK National Migraine Registry and Audit Tool, Anna Andreou, UK |
15:00 – 15:40 |
|
15:40 – 16:00 |
HALL D |
|
08:30 – 09:30 |
|
09:30 – 10:40 |
|
10:40 – 11:10 |
BREAK |
11:10 – 12:10 |
Oral Poster Presentations 4 |
12:10 – 13:40 |
LUNCH BREAK / POSTER VIEWING / EXHIBITION12:30 – 13:30
How can basic scientists, healthcare professionals and patients work together for the advancement of BPS?
|
12:40 – 13:40 Attended Poster Viewing Session (Even Numbers) |
|
13:40 – 15:00 |
Parallel Session D4 Basic ScienceDissecting Mechanisms that Underlie the Pain Experience Using Novel Approaches Chair: Kirsty Bannister, UKHow does the nervous system handle pain throughout life? Neuroplasticity in the developing and aging nervous system and the role of opioids in shaping pain experience, Gareth Hathway, UK Developing better translational biomarkers of activity in nociceptive circuits, Tony Pickering, UK The role of soluble epoxide hydrolase in regulating inflammation and pain: opportunities for novel analgesic strategies, Victoria Chapman, UK |
15:00 – 15:40 |
|
15:40 – 16:00 |
See the last year’s Scientific Programme below.