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March 2018
Title: PATH-Pain: A Behavioral Intervention For Older Adults With Negative Emotions And Chronic Pain In Primary Care Presenter: Dimitris Kiosses, PhD, Weill Cornell Medicine Dr. Kiosses will discuss PATH-Pain, a new behavioral intervention for older adults with chronic pain and negative emotions in primary care. PATH-Pain is a manualized 8-week program for primary care that consists of 8 weekly individual sessions and 1 group educational session. All sessions are designed for patients and a willing and available study partner (e.g., family member, caregiver, friend). The goals of PATH-Pain are to reduce negative emotions associated with pain and pain-related disability, increase positive [...]
Find out moreApril 2018
Title: Developing, Refining, & Evaluating a Behavioral Intervention Targeting Comorbid Chronic Back Pain & Depression in Older Adults Presenter: Una Makris, MD, UT Southwestern Medical Center Chronic musculoskeletal pain (including chronic back pain) and comorbid mental health diagnoses (including depression) remain common, costly and challenging to manage. Dr. Makris will discuss the development of a behavioral intervention that simultaneously targets chronic back pain and depression in older adults. Core intervention components include patient activation, motivational interviewing, and goal setting that are employed to improve outcomes most relevant to older adults with comorbid physical pain and mental health diagnoses.
Find out moreMay 2018
Title: A Technology-Assisted Chronic Pain Self-Management Intervention for Older Adults in a Low-income, Urban Setting Presenter: Mary Janevic, PhD, MPH, University of Michigan African American older adults living in resource-challenged settings are at high risk for pain-related disability, and have limited opportunities to learn chronic pain self-management skills that may help improve function. Dr. Janevic will describe the development of a “high tech/high touch” pain self-management intervention that integrates physical activity monitoring and web-based instruction with support from a community health worker, to be tested in a pilot study in Detroit.
Find out moreJune 2018
Title: Acceptance and Commitment Therapy for Chronic Pain in Older Adults Presenter: Julie Wetherell, PhD, University of California at San Diego Overview: Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) is a psychotherapy model that deemphasizes efforts to change aversive internal experiences and prioritizes living in accordance with deeply held values, even in the presence of distress or discomfort. It is one of few therapeutic modalities that the American Psychological Association’s Division 12 (Society for Clinical Psychology) describes as having “strong research support” for chronic or persistent pain. Dr. Wetherell’s presentation will describe the ACT model and discuss the use of ACT for chronic [...]
Find out moreFebruary 2019
Presenter: Robert D. Kerns, PhD, Professor of Psychiatry, Neurology and Psychology at Yale University A broad array of evidence-based psychological approaches for the management of pain are currently available including mindfulness-based stress reduction, progressive relaxation, biofeedback, hypnosis, operant-behavioral therapy, cognitive-behavioral therapy, acceptance and commitment therapy, couples and family therapy, and supportive psychotherapy, among others. The strength of evidence of efficacy and effectiveness for these approaches varies across specific pain conditions and settings and across outcome domains. Scientific knowledge and practice gaps, particularly organizational, provider and patient barriers to accessing psychological therapies for pain, will be highlighted. To register for this webinar, [...]
Find out moreMarch 2019
Presenter: Fadal Zeidan, PhD, Assistant Professor, University of California San Diego Dr. Fadel Zeidan will describe the psychological, physiological and neural processes that are involved in mindfulness meditation-based pain relief. He will also discuss how mindfulness is different from placebo and the potential clinical applications of mindfulness. To register for this seminar, click here. The 2019 webinar series, Mechanisms and Management of Later-Life Pain, is co-sponsored by TRIPLL and University of Florida’s Pain Research and Intervention Center of Excellence.
Find out moreApril 2019
Presenter: Lynn Martire, PhD, Professor of Human Development & Family Studies, Penn State University Self-management of chronic pain often involves monitoring symptoms, adhering to medication regimens, and improving health behaviors, all of which occur in a social context. Dr. Martire will review the existing evidence supporting behavioral pain interventions that target a close family member as well as the pain sufferer, summarize key knowledge gaps in this area, and describe opportunities for future research To register for this seminar, click here. The 2019 webinar series, Mechanisms and Management of Later-Life Pain, is co-sponsored by TRIPLL and University of Florida’s Pain Research and Intervention Center [...]
Find out moreMay 2019
Presenter: Joseph Riley III, PhD, Professor, University of Florida College of Dentistry Community-based and clinical findings indicate that older adults are at greater risk for more frequent and prolonged pain and suffer from pain at multiple sites compared to younger cohorts. Dr. Riley will present data from his sensory testing laboratory that demonstrate older adults exhibit diminished descending pain inhibitory capacity and increased pain facilitation. An imbalance of these systems among older adults likely contribute to the increased risk for the development of persistent pain compared to younger adults. To register for this seminar, click here. The 2019 webinar series, Mechanisms and Management of Later-Life Pain, is co-sponsored [...]
Find out moreJuly 2019
Presenter: Debra K. Weiner, MD, FACP, Professor of Medicine, Psychiatry, Anesthesiology and Clinical & Translational Science University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine This presentation will discuss the evolution of Dr. Weiner’s research on chronic low back pain in older adults. Her research developed organically in the context of her clinical care of these patients and has evolved into a multi-site clinical trial. She hopes that this model can be applied to others who wish to develop a program of research. To register for this webinar, click here. The 2019 webinar series, Mechanisms and Management of Later-Life Pain, is co-sponsored by TRIPLL and University [...]
Find out moreMay 2020
The Role of Mechanism Discovery and Targeting in the NIH Stage Model Monday, May 18, 2020 1:00 pm - 2:00 pm EST Presenter: Donald Edmondson, PhD, MPH, Columbia University Irving Medical Center Overview:The need for effective behavioral interventions has never been greater, but existing interventions yield weak and/or difficult to replicate effects. Further, implementation of behavioral interventions at scale is rare, and may further dilute intervention effects. The NIH Stage Model provides a framework for guiding intervention development from early phase discovery through large scale implementation, and the NIH Science of Behavior Change (SOBC) program has articulated a rigorous method for incorporating the [...]
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