Date: Tuesday, June 25, 2024, 6:00 pm to 7:00 pm, Eastern (US) Time
This webinar is being produced through a collaboration of the IASP’s Social Aspects of Pain Special Interest Group and IASP’s Sex, Gender, Race, and Pain Special Interest Group.
The mission of IASP’s Social Aspects of Pain Special Interest Group is to “raise awareness and understanding of the social context of pain within the IASP community and the community at large,” while the mission of IASP’s Sex, Gender, Race, and Pain Special Interest Group is to “encourage basic and clinical research on how sex, gender, and race affect pain mechanisms and all realms of its management.”
During this webinar, we will explore how sociological differences such as culture, language, socioeconomic status, and more affect pain management throughout the world. Additionally, there will be discussion regarding how to improve access, experience, and outcomes in pain care/management throughout these diverse communities.
Participants include:
- Bernadette Brady, PhD, NSW Health, Sydney, Australia
Chronic pain management among culturally and linguistically diverse communities living in Australia - Bukola Ibitoye, PhD(c), University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada
Achieving equity in sickle cell pain care in Nigeria - Saurab Sharma, PhD, University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia
Low back pain management in low- and middle-income countries
About the Presenters
Bernadette Brady, PhD, is a musculoskeletal and pain physiotherapist who holds a clinical specialist physiotherapy and clinical research fellowship in the South Western Sydney Local Health District in Australia. Bernadette achieved her PhD at Western Sydney University investigating culturally responsive approaches to pain management. Her research has led to the design and implementation of culturally adapted pain management programs for people from Arabic, Assyrian, and Vietnamese communities, and was recognized as a winner of a NSW Health Award in 2017. Through her fellowship, conjoint, and clinical roles, Bernadette is pursuing a program of research seeking to improve outcomes for culturally and linguistically diverse (CALD) communities with chronic conditions using co-design and community participatory methodologies.
Bukola Ibitoye, PhD(c), has focused her research (supervised by Dr. Bernie Garrett and Dr. Manon Ranger of UBC and Dr. Jennifer Stinson of the University of Toronto, Canada) on sickle cell disease (SCD), with a focus at the epicenter of this disease: Nigeria. Following a scoping review of Nigerian adolescents to discover their preferred methods of pain management, Bukola discovered that they utilized various non-pharmacological interventions (NPIs) that could lead to potentially adverse events. In addition, the effectiveness of NPIs amongst this population has been under-investigated. In light of her findings, Bukola is developing a patient-centered web-based pain toolkit of evidence-based NPIs that can introduce adolescents to safe and effective NPIs to reduce pain and educate them against harmful practices.
Saurab Sharma, MD, has focused his research on improving pain care and research in low-income settings. He aims to improve the lives of people with pain and other long-term conditions by developing culturally appropriate, inexpensive, effective, and safe interventions – particularly for culturally and linguistically diverse communities and low-resourced settings/countries. His current research focuses on understanding the role of culture in chronic pain and developing global strategies to improve musculoskeletal health.