Registration & Abstract Submissions NOW OPEN!
Join us at the BPS Annual Scientific Meeting 2026 in Harrogate, a key event for anyone involved in pain management, research, and care.
Submit your abstract or register today: https://t.co/wfIvh9aVjr
In this week’s #PAIN Featured Image, @chris_eccleston et al. depict some of the hierarchical levels across which interoception can be delineated. Learn more at https://t.co/ZgQwmeaJfv
Combat injuries and pediatric blast injuries took center stage at #BPSASM2025.
Chaired by Cathy Price, Harriet Kemp and Emma Fisher shared vital insights into pain management for veterans and children.
#PainCare#VeteranHealth#PediatricPain
As always delighted to be learning about gender pain. And how to be inclusive in clinical practice. @KatelynnBoerner is an inspiration every time @BritishPainSoc#bpsasm2025
Fantastic plenary session by @EmmaFisher1@BritishPainSoc talking about pain in children with blast injuries. Understanding the needs to children injured in warzones #bpsasm2025
A warm welcome from Professor Roger Knaggs (BPS President) and Professor Ed Keogh (Scientific Programme Chair) as we get ready for #BPSASM2025.
Join us in Newport for an event full of insight, innovation, and inspiration.
🔗 https://t.co/h4ufY9lhZg
New @BathCPR paper: A review in The Lancet by @Chris_Eccleston and colleagues argues that psychological treatments can be used early on, when pain first emerges. Access details, and a link to the paper here: https://t.co/bxyk17ejUb
Congratulations to Professor Emma Fisher @EmmaFisher1 of the Bath Centre for Pain Research @BathCPR promoted to a personal chair for her international standing in paediatric pain research and evidence based medicine.👏👏
We are delighted to congratulate @EmmaFisher1 who has recently been promoted to Professor. A fabulous achievement, reflecting significant international leadership in pain research. Very well deserved. @BathCPR
Children in deprived areas are most at risk of avoidable poisoning by medicines.
Researchers examined hospital admissions for children poisoned with medicines between 1998 and 2018. Compared with children living in the least deprived areas, those living in the most deprived areas were 30% more likely to be admitted to hospital for any medicinal poisoning.
Find out more about this research: https://t.co/NGRuks2dvA
We’re thrilled to welcome Emma Fisher, Senior Research Fellow at the University of Bath, to #BPSASM2025! 🤩 Her research explores chronic pain in children, blast trauma, and more, making her insights invaluable to pain science.
Don't miss her session! https://t.co/QJOT2NyLJt
Pain research must reflect the diversity of those it serves. A new editorial from PAIN's Editor-in-Chief @kren27 explores the critical role of #DEI in study design & clinical practice. Read more: https://t.co/LJjkSy3ywm #ScienceForAll
Review: Drs. Vitali, @Chris_Eccleston and colleagues outline a theory-driven approach for fitting new measurement models to chronic pain data from large cohort studies, and evaluating their psychometric properties
Full: https://t.co/bzGBTQY0Os
Meet the first plenary speakers for #ISPP2025.
Dr. Katelynn Boerner leads research on health equity in pediatric pain, addressing gender and neurodiversity.
Dr. Bonnie Stevens has transformed procedural pain management for infants in hospital settings.
Join us June 17-20 in Glasgow. Early bird registration ends March 7: https://t.co/zydTPjQVwi #PediatricPain #ISPP2025
Check out articles like “Digital therapeutics and behavioral chronic pain management: closing the gap between innovation and effective use” by @chris_eccleston et al. in #PAIN https://t.co/rJMKjiFeng