final program - ispp 2019 · workshop 2 schmerzmanagement durch hypnose 14:00 – 15:00 workshop 3...
TRANSCRIPT
Final ProgramWWW.ISPP2019.ORG
Organised by
Supported by
Institut universitaire de formation et de recherche en soins – IUFRS
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
Welcome Message . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
Committees . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
Program Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Venue Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
Scientific Program
Education Day, Sunday, 16 June 2019 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
Monday, 17 June 2019 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
Tuesday, 18 June 2019 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
Wednesday, 19 June 2019 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37
Thursday, 20 June 2019 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44
Posters
Sunday, 16 June 2019 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46
Monday, 17 June 2019 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47
Tuesday, 18 June 2019 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54
Wednesday, 19 June 2019 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 61
Networking Opportunities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 68
General Information . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 69
Industry Information
Exhibitor Floor Plan . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 72
List of Exhibitors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 73
Imprint
Editor PublisherISPP 2019 Wecomc/o Congrex Switzerland Ltd . Gesellschaft für Kommunikation mbH & Co . KG Hildesheim / Germany
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WELCOME MESSAGE
Welcome, Bonjour, Buongiorno, Allegra and Grüezi to the ISPP 2019 in Basel – Switzerland
Dear colleagues and friends,
Switzerland with its well-known peaceful living across multiple cultures is honored to welcome you – coming from all over the world – to the 12th International Symposium on Pediatric Pain 2019 (ISPP 2019) in Basel – a city located in the Middle of Europe! In an exemplary way, the city of Basel stands for tradition with its unique historic city center, ancient top ranked University (year 1460) and unlimited cultural opportunities combined with hosting the worldwide leading biotechnology and life sciences clusters and most innovative business centers . Most importantly, Switzerland is putting the right of children in the forefront of its democracy: Did you know that Switzerland has established children’s parliaments in several cities to provide children with their democratic right to speak out their needs, e .g . for well-kept and protected playgrounds in the cities?
This is why the local committee selected the topic of “Children and families as partners in pain management” as the overarching theme for the ISPP 2019 . ISPP 2019 aims at enriching interprofessional basics and applied science on pediatric pain management by having invited scientist clinicians and educators from all over the world . The scientific committee under the lead of Prof . Dr . Gary Walco from Seattle (USA) has focused on the development of a program that considers needs of scientists for cutting-edge evidence without neglecting the most important partners: Suffering children and their families . Therefore, the 12th International Symposium on Pediatric Pain offers learning experiences that build on over three decades of science dedicated to improving the prevention and treatment of needless pain and suffering in infants, children, and adolescents . The plenary speakers who have agreed to come and share their wisdom are each tops in their respective fields and encompass contributions from basic and translational research, clinical research and the challenges of generalizing knowledge to practice in developing countries . In addition, there will be multiple concurrent workshops on specific areas of interest, as well as poster sessions designed to promote immediate interaction with the investigators . The field of pediatric pain has progressed substantially since the first ISPP in the year 1988 in the USA and this meeting 31 years later taking place in the Middle of Europe will highlight the advances, embracing the theme of partnering with children and families . We strongly believe, that the hosting of the ISPP in Switzerland will substantially promote and impact scientific and public awareness related to pain in children .
The local committee is extremely honored to host the ISPP 2019 in Switzerland and to contribute to an unforgettable and enriching event .
Enjoy ISPP 2019 and your stay in Basel!
On behalf of the local organizing committee
Prof. Dr. Eva Cignacco Head of Applied Research and Development in Midwifery, Division of Midwifery BernUniversity of Applied Sciences, Department of Health Professions
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COMMITTEES
Local Organizing Committee
Eva Bergsträsser University Children’s Hospital, Zurich
Camilla Ceppi Swiss Society of Pediatrics, Zurich
Eva Cignacco (Chair) Bern University of Applied Sciences, Department of Health Professions, Berne
Dorothée Eichenberger Bern University of Applied Sciences, Department of Health Professions, Berne
Sandra Jeker University Children’s Hospital, Basel
Helen Köchlin University of Basel, Faculty of Psychology, Basel
Katrin Marfurt-Russenberger Swiss Association for Nursing Science with its Academic Society for Pediatric Nursing and Children’s Hospital, St. Gallen
Mathias Nelle Swiss Society of Pediatrics and Swiss Society of Neonatology, Berne
Anne-Sylvie Ramelet Institute of Higher Education and Research in Healthcare of the Faculty of Biology and Medicine at the University of Lausanne, Lausanne
Wilhelm Ruppen University Hospital, Basel
Karin Schenk Bern University of Applied Sciences, Department of Health Professions, Berne
Lilian Stoffel University Children’s Hospital, Berne
Marc Suter International Association for the Study of Pain, Swiss National Chapter and Lausanne University, Lausanne
Pascale Wenger SwissPedNet – the Swiss Research Network of Clinical Pediatric Hubs, Basel
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COMMITTEES
Scientific Committee
Mariana Bueno The Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, CA
John Collins The Children’s Hospital at Westmead and University of Sydney, AU
Ruth Eckstein Grunau University of British Columbia, Department of Pediatrics, BC Childrens Hospital Research Institute, Vancouver, CA
Ananda Fernandes IASP Special Interest Group Pain in Childhood, Nursing School of Coimbra, PT
Liesbet Goubert Ghent University, Ghent, BE
Joshua Ngwang Menang CALMEF Practice, CM
Jennifer Rabbitts University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle Children’s Hospital, Seattle, US
Laura Simons Stanford University, Palo Alto, California, US
Rebeccah Slater University of Oxford, Department of Paediatrics, UK
Dick Tibboel Erasmus MC – Sophia Children’s Hospital, Rotterdam, NL
Gary A. Walco (Chair) University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, US
THE SWISS SOCIETY OF PAEDIATRICS
Founded in 1901 the Swiss Society of Paediatrics (SGP/SSP)
is an organization of more than 2500 paediatricians dedicated
to the optimal physical, mental, and social health for all infants,
children, and adolescents in Switzerland. The SGP/SSP is multilingual,
represents both hospital and office paediatricians, and is home
to all paediatric subspeciality societies. As the official national society
representing paediatric professionals, the SGP/SSP is a partner
of state and federal health authorities and issues, on behalf of the latter,
the national paediatric board licenses.
Visit us www.swiss-paediatrics.org
and
https://paediatrica.swiss-paediatrics.org/
Contact us [email protected]
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PROGRAM OVERVIEW, EDUCATION DAY, SUNDAY, 16 JUNE 2019
RoomSydney Singapore Rio Osaka Samarkand Poster exhibition
Room
08:30 08:30
08:45 08:45 – 10:50 Plenary Session 1
08:45
09:00 09:00
09:15 09:15
09:30 09:30
09:45 09:45
10:00 10:00
10:15 10:15
10:30 10:30
10:45 10:50 – 11:15 Coffee, posters and networking
10:50 – 11:15 Coffee, posters and networking
10:45
11:00 11:00
11:15 11:15 – 12:55 Plenary Session 2
11:15
11:30 11:30
11:45 11:45
12:00 12:00
12:15 12:15
12:30 12:30
12:45 12:45
13:00 12:55 – 14:00 Lunch, SGSS-SSED poster session and networking
12:55 – 14:00 Lunch, SGSS-SSED poster session and networking
13:00 – 14:00Poster Session SGSS-SSED
13:00
13:15 13:15
13:30 13:30
13:45 13:45
14:00 14:00 – 15:00 Workshop 1
Multimodal analgesia in children: efficacy, safety, and evidence of opioids
in pediatric pain treatment
14:00 – 15:00 Workshop 2
Schmerzmanagement durch Hypnose
14:00 – 15:00Workshop 3
Prise en charge interdisciplinaire des douleurs chroniques fonctionnelles del’enfant et de l’adolescent au CHUV
14:00 – 15:00Workshop 4
Come individuare il dolore infantile, superando i limiti delle scale di valuta-
zione del dolore
14:00
14:15 14:15
14:30 14:30
14:45 14:45
15:00 15:00 – 15:30Coffee, posters and networking
15:00 – 15:30Coffee, posters and networking
15:00
15:15 15:15
15:30 15:30 – 16:30 Workshop 5
Communication with parents about chronic pain of their child
15:30 – 16:30Workshop 6
How to detect infants‘ pain, overcoming the flaws of pain scales
15:30 – 16:30Workshop 7
Ambulante interdisziplinäre Schmerzsprechstunde – Essentielles
anhand konkreter Fälle
15:30 – 16:30Workshop 8
Une approche centrée sur le patient et la famille pour assurer le confort chez les
enfants aux soins intensifs
15:30
15:45 15:45
16:00 16:00
16:15 16:15
16:30 16:30
16:4516:40 – 17:10
Plenary Session 3
16:45
17:00 17:00
17:15 17:15 – 18:00General Meeting of Members
SGSS-SSED
17:15
17:30 17:30
17:45 17:45
18:00 18:00 – 19:30Welcome Reception
18:00 – 19:30Welcome Reception
18:00
18:15 18:15
18:30 18:30
18:45 18:45
19:00 19:00
19:15 19:15
19:30 19:30
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RoomSydney Singapore Rio Osaka Samarkand Poster exhibition
Room
08:30 08:30
08:45 08:45 – 10:50 Plenary Session 1
08:45
09:00 09:00
09:15 09:15
09:30 09:30
09:45 09:45
10:00 10:00
10:15 10:15
10:30 10:30
10:45 10:50 – 11:15 Coffee, posters and networking
10:50 – 11:15 Coffee, posters and networking
10:45
11:00 11:00
11:15 11:15 – 12:55 Plenary Session 2
11:15
11:30 11:30
11:45 11:45
12:00 12:00
12:15 12:15
12:30 12:30
12:45 12:45
13:00 12:55 – 14:00 Lunch, SGSS-SSED poster session and networking
12:55 – 14:00 Lunch, SGSS-SSED poster session and networking
13:00 – 14:00Poster Session SGSS-SSED
13:00
13:15 13:15
13:30 13:30
13:45 13:45
14:00 14:00 – 15:00 Workshop 1
Multimodal analgesia in children: efficacy, safety, and evidence of opioids
in pediatric pain treatment
14:00 – 15:00 Workshop 2
Schmerzmanagement durch Hypnose
14:00 – 15:00Workshop 3
Prise en charge interdisciplinaire des douleurs chroniques fonctionnelles del’enfant et de l’adolescent au CHUV
14:00 – 15:00Workshop 4
Come individuare il dolore infantile, superando i limiti delle scale di valuta-
zione del dolore
14:00
14:15 14:15
14:30 14:30
14:45 14:45
15:00 15:00 – 15:30Coffee, posters and networking
15:00 – 15:30Coffee, posters and networking
15:00
15:15 15:15
15:30 15:30 – 16:30 Workshop 5
Communication with parents about chronic pain of their child
15:30 – 16:30Workshop 6
How to detect infants‘ pain, overcoming the flaws of pain scales
15:30 – 16:30Workshop 7
Ambulante interdisziplinäre Schmerzsprechstunde – Essentielles
anhand konkreter Fälle
15:30 – 16:30Workshop 8
Une approche centrée sur le patient et la famille pour assurer le confort chez les
enfants aux soins intensifs
15:30
15:45 15:45
16:00 16:00
16:15 16:15
16:30 16:30
16:4516:40 – 17:10
Plenary Session 3
16:45
17:00 17:00
17:15 17:15 – 18:00General Meeting of Members
SGSS-SSED
17:15
17:30 17:30
17:45 17:45
18:00 18:00 – 19:30Welcome Reception
18:00 – 19:30Welcome Reception
18:00
18:15 18:15
18:30 18:30
18:45 18:45
19:00 19:00
19:15 19:15
19:30 19:30
PROGRAM OVERVIEW, EDUCATION DAY, SUNDAY, 16 JUNE 2019
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PROGRAM OVERVIEW, MONDAY, 17 JUNE 2019
RoomSydney Singapore Rio Osaka Samarkand Poster exhibition
Room
08:3008:30 – 09:00
Official Opening
08:30
08:45 08:45
09:0009:00 – 09:15 Art and Pain 09:00
09:1509:15 – 10:00
Plenary 1 Opioids – a balance between pain treat-
ment and misuse and diversion
09:15
09:30 09:30
09:45 09:45
10:0010:00 – 10:30
Coffee, posters and networking10:00 – 10:30
Coffee, posters and networking
10:00
10:15 10:15
10:3010:30 – 11:15
Plenary 2 Placebo and nocebo in infants
and children
10:30
10:45 10:45
11:00 11:00
11:1511:15 – 12:00
Plenary 3 Trauma, vulnerability and pain
11:15
11:30 11:30
11:45 11:45
12:0012:00 – 13:30
Lunch, Poster Session 1 and networking12:00 – 13:30
Lunch, Poster Session 1 and networking
12:00
12:15 12:15
12:3012:30 – 13:30
Author Attended Poster Session 1
P1-01 – P1-77
12:30
12:45 12:45
13:00 13:00
13:15 13:15
13:30 13:30 – 14:00 Plenary 4 Electronic Persistent Pain Outcomes
Collaboration (EPPOC)
13:30
13:45 13:45
14:0014:05 – 15:35Workshop 1
Understanding non-acute pain in neonates and infants –
Where are we at?
14:05 – 15:35Workshop 2
The perils are plentiful, but the prizes are palpable: dissemination and implementation of evidence for improved acute pediatric pain
treatment across international settings
14:05 – 15:35Workshop 3
The neurobiology of developing pain pathways
14:05 – 15:35Workshop 4 Applying a
transdiagnostic lens to childhood chronic pain: examining shared mechanisms between pediatric
pain and mental health disorders
14:05 – 15:35Workshop 19
Home alone – pediatric pain assessment and management at
home
14:00
14:15 14:15
14:30 14:30
14:45 14:45
15:00 15:00
15:15 15:15
15:3015:35 – 16:00
Coffee, posters and networking15:35 – 16:00
Coffee, posters and networking
15:30
15:45 15:45
16:0016:00 – 17:30Workshop 6
What can imaging brain activity tells us about pain and its
consequences in infants and children?
16:00 – 17:30Workshop 7
Paying attention to distraction: a critical consideration of
distraction mechanisms and effectiveness in acute and
chronic pain contexts
16:00 – 17:30Workshop 8
Acknowledging the “elephant in the room”: uncertainty in the context of pediatric pain
16:00 – 17:30Workshop 9
Sources of individual variability when using objective measures of
paediatric pain
16:00 – 17:30Workshop 10
Biological influences on adolescent pain:
sex, stress, and inflammation
16:00
16:15 16:15
16:30 16:30
16:45 16:45
17:00 17:00
17:15 17:15
17:30 17:30
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RoomSydney Singapore Rio Osaka Samarkand Poster exhibition
Room
08:3008:30 – 09:00
Official Opening
08:30
08:45 08:45
09:0009:00 – 09:15 Art and Pain 09:00
09:1509:15 – 10:00
Plenary 1 Opioids – a balance between pain treat-
ment and misuse and diversion
09:15
09:30 09:30
09:45 09:45
10:0010:00 – 10:30
Coffee, posters and networking10:00 – 10:30
Coffee, posters and networking
10:00
10:15 10:15
10:3010:30 – 11:15
Plenary 2 Placebo and nocebo in infants
and children
10:30
10:45 10:45
11:00 11:00
11:1511:15 – 12:00
Plenary 3 Trauma, vulnerability and pain
11:15
11:30 11:30
11:45 11:45
12:0012:00 – 13:30
Lunch, Poster Session 1 and networking12:00 – 13:30
Lunch, Poster Session 1 and networking
12:00
12:15 12:15
12:3012:30 – 13:30
Author Attended Poster Session 1
P1-01 – P1-77
12:30
12:45 12:45
13:00 13:00
13:15 13:15
13:30 13:30 – 14:00 Plenary 4 Electronic Persistent Pain Outcomes
Collaboration (EPPOC)
13:30
13:45 13:45
14:0014:05 – 15:35Workshop 1
Understanding non-acute pain in neonates and infants –
Where are we at?
14:05 – 15:35Workshop 2
The perils are plentiful, but the prizes are palpable: dissemination and implementation of evidence for improved acute pediatric pain
treatment across international settings
14:05 – 15:35Workshop 3
The neurobiology of developing pain pathways
14:05 – 15:35Workshop 4 Applying a
transdiagnostic lens to childhood chronic pain: examining shared mechanisms between pediatric
pain and mental health disorders
14:05 – 15:35Workshop 19
Home alone – pediatric pain assessment and management at
home
14:00
14:15 14:15
14:30 14:30
14:45 14:45
15:00 15:00
15:15 15:15
15:3015:35 – 16:00
Coffee, posters and networking15:35 – 16:00
Coffee, posters and networking
15:30
15:45 15:45
16:0016:00 – 17:30Workshop 6
What can imaging brain activity tells us about pain and its
consequences in infants and children?
16:00 – 17:30Workshop 7
Paying attention to distraction: a critical consideration of
distraction mechanisms and effectiveness in acute and
chronic pain contexts
16:00 – 17:30Workshop 8
Acknowledging the “elephant in the room”: uncertainty in the context of pediatric pain
16:00 – 17:30Workshop 9
Sources of individual variability when using objective measures of
paediatric pain
16:00 – 17:30Workshop 10
Biological influences on adolescent pain:
sex, stress, and inflammation
16:00
16:15 16:15
16:30 16:30
16:45 16:45
17:00 17:00
17:15 17:15
17:30 17:30
PROGRAM OVERVIEW, MONDAY, 17 JUNE 2019
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26
24
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PROGRAM OVERVIEW, TUESDAY, 18 JUNE 2019
RoomSydney Singapore Rio Osaka Samarkand Poster exhibition
Room
08:00 08:00 – 08:15 Art and Pain 08:00
08:1508:15 – 09:00
Plenary 5 Neonatal pain: pharmacology
08:15
08:30 08:30
08:45 08:45
09:0009:00 – 09:45
Plenary 6 Pain treatment in developing countries:
reducing the gap
09:00
09:15 09:15
09:30 09:30
09:4509:45 – 10:15
Coffee, posters and networking09:45 – 10:15
Coffee, posters and networking
09:45
10:00 10:00
10:1510:15 – 11:45Workshop 11
Trauma and pediatric pain: translational examinations of cognitive, behavioural,
interpersonal, and neurobiological mechanisms
10:15 – 11:45Workshop 12
Beyond family-centered care: youth and families as partners in pediatric chronic pain program
planning, evaluation, and research
10:15 – 11:45Workshop 13
“Why Me?” Individual differences in susceptibility to pain in little
rodents and little people
10:15 – 11:45Workshop 25
Innovative methods of assessment and treatment of
chronic pain in pediatric sickle cell disease: unraveling the acute to
chronic pain transition
10:15 – 11:45Workshop 16
Thinking outside the diagnostic box: advancing how we think, write and talk about children’s
pain
10:15
10:30 10:30
10:45 10:45
11:00 11:00
11:15 11:15
11:30 11:30
11:4511:45 – 13:30
Lunch, Poster Session 2 and networking11:45 – 13:30
Lunch, Poster Session 2 and networking
11:45
12:00 12:00
12:15 12:15
12:3012:30 – 13:30
Author Attended Poster Session 2
P2-78 – P2-154
12:30
12:45 12:45
13:00 13:00
13:15 13:15
13:3013:30 – 15:00Workshop 15
Comparing apples to apples? A multidisciplinary examination of the efficacy of intensive inter-disciplinary pain treatment for
youth with abdominal pain, headache, or musculoskeletal pain
13:30 – 15:00Workshop 17
Pain in children and adolescents with intellectual and
developmental disabilities – time to act!
13:30 – 15:00Workshop 18
The bigger picture: the role of social, emotional, and cognitive
development in shaping pain responses across early childhood
13:30 – 15:00Workshop 5
Clinical application of mindfulness for adolescents with chronic pain
conditions and their parents lessons learned from in person to eHealth
modalities
13:30 – 15:00Workshop 20
The Asian experience – prevalence and parenting needs
13:30
13:45 13:45
14:00 14:00
14:15 14:15
14:30 14:30
14:45 14:45
15:0015:00 – 15:30
Coffee, posters and networking15:00 – 15:30
Coffee, posters and networking
15:00
15:15 15:15
15:3015:30 – 17:00Workshop 21
Exploring the critical role of parents in pediatric pain: from managing needles to complex
rehabilitation
15:30 – 17:00Workshop 22
Tackling the problem of infant pain relief – multidimensional
approaches to assessing analgesics
15:30 – 17:00Workshop 23
Mind-body perspectives on chronic post surgical pain in children: role of parent-family interactions, genetics-epigenetics and mindfulness based
meditation
15:30 – 17:00Workshop 24
Quantitative sensory testing in pediatric pain: methods,
perspectives and applications
15:30 – 17:00Workshop 14
Bringing pediatric pain management into the 21st century: using learning health systems to engage patients and families in individualized pain
assessment and treatment
15:30
15:45 15:45
16:00 16:00
16:15 16:15
16:30 16:30
16:45 16:45
17:00 17:00 – 17:40Special Lecture
Médecins Sans Frontières
17:00
17:15 17:15
19:30 – 22:30Gala Dinner
19:30 – 22:30Gala Dinner
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RoomSydney Singapore Rio Osaka Samarkand Poster exhibition
Room
08:00 08:00 – 08:15 Art and Pain 08:00
08:1508:15 – 09:00
Plenary 5 Neonatal pain: pharmacology
08:15
08:30 08:30
08:45 08:45
09:0009:00 – 09:45
Plenary 6 Pain treatment in developing countries:
reducing the gap
09:00
09:15 09:15
09:30 09:30
09:4509:45 – 10:15
Coffee, posters and networking09:45 – 10:15
Coffee, posters and networking
09:45
10:00 10:00
10:1510:15 – 11:45Workshop 11
Trauma and pediatric pain: translational examinations of cognitive, behavioural,
interpersonal, and neurobiological mechanisms
10:15 – 11:45Workshop 12
Beyond family-centered care: youth and families as partners in pediatric chronic pain program
planning, evaluation, and research
10:15 – 11:45Workshop 13
“Why Me?” Individual differences in susceptibility to pain in little
rodents and little people
10:15 – 11:45Workshop 25
Innovative methods of assessment and treatment of
chronic pain in pediatric sickle cell disease: unraveling the acute to
chronic pain transition
10:15 – 11:45Workshop 16
Thinking outside the diagnostic box: advancing how we think, write and talk about children’s
pain
10:15
10:30 10:30
10:45 10:45
11:00 11:00
11:15 11:15
11:30 11:30
11:4511:45 – 13:30
Lunch, Poster Session 2 and networking11:45 – 13:30
Lunch, Poster Session 2 and networking
11:45
12:00 12:00
12:15 12:15
12:3012:30 – 13:30
Author Attended Poster Session 2
P2-78 – P2-154
12:30
12:45 12:45
13:00 13:00
13:15 13:15
13:3013:30 – 15:00Workshop 15
Comparing apples to apples? A multidisciplinary examination of the efficacy of intensive inter-disciplinary pain treatment for
youth with abdominal pain, headache, or musculoskeletal pain
13:30 – 15:00Workshop 17
Pain in children and adolescents with intellectual and
developmental disabilities – time to act!
13:30 – 15:00Workshop 18
The bigger picture: the role of social, emotional, and cognitive
development in shaping pain responses across early childhood
13:30 – 15:00Workshop 5
Clinical application of mindfulness for adolescents with chronic pain
conditions and their parents lessons learned from in person to eHealth
modalities
13:30 – 15:00Workshop 20
The Asian experience – prevalence and parenting needs
13:30
13:45 13:45
14:00 14:00
14:15 14:15
14:30 14:30
14:45 14:45
15:0015:00 – 15:30
Coffee, posters and networking15:00 – 15:30
Coffee, posters and networking
15:00
15:15 15:15
15:3015:30 – 17:00Workshop 21
Exploring the critical role of parents in pediatric pain: from managing needles to complex
rehabilitation
15:30 – 17:00Workshop 22
Tackling the problem of infant pain relief – multidimensional
approaches to assessing analgesics
15:30 – 17:00Workshop 23
Mind-body perspectives on chronic post surgical pain in children: role of parent-family interactions, genetics-epigenetics and mindfulness based
meditation
15:30 – 17:00Workshop 24
Quantitative sensory testing in pediatric pain: methods,
perspectives and applications
15:30 – 17:00Workshop 14
Bringing pediatric pain management into the 21st century: using learning health systems to engage patients and families in individualized pain
assessment and treatment
15:30
15:45 15:45
16:00 16:00
16:15 16:15
16:30 16:30
16:45 16:45
17:00 17:00 – 17:40Special Lecture
Médecins Sans Frontières
17:00
17:15 17:15
19:30 – 22:30Gala Dinner
19:30 – 22:30Gala Dinner
PROGRAM OVERVIEW, TUESDAY, 18 JUNE 2019
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32
35
30
33
54
35
68
14
PROGRAM OVERVIEW, WEDNESDAY, 19 JUNE 2019
RoomSydney Singapore Rio Osaka Samarkand Poster exhibition
Room
08:0008:00 – 09:00
Media Festival
08:00
08:15 08:15
08:30 08:30
08:45 08:45
09:0009:05 – 10:35Workshop 26
Placebo effects in children: sensory perception, executive
function and potential applications in the clinical
setting
09:05 – 10:35Workshop 27
Rare pain disorders – stories of pins and needles, of genes and
of success!
09:05 – 10:35Workshop 28
Promoting psychological flexibility in youth with chronic pain: evidence from acceptance
and commitment therapies
09:05 – 10:35Workshop 29
Pain in chronic critically ill children: how can parents and
families help?
09:05 – 10:35Workshop 30
Ethics of conducting and publishing placebo/no treatment trials of analgesic effects of pain treatments for acute procedural
pain in infants
09:00
09:15 09:15
09:30 09:30
09:45 09:45
10:00 10:00
10:15 10:15
10:3010:35 – 11:00
Coffee, posters and networking10:35 – 11:00
Coffee, posters and networking
10:30
10:45 10:45
11:0011:00 – 11:45
Plenary 7 Intergenerational pain
transmission
11:00
11:15 11:15
11:30 11:30
11:4511:45 – 12:30
General meeting of members, IASP SIG on pain in childhood
11:45
12:00 12:00
12:15 12:15
12:3012:30 – 13:45
Lunch, Poster Session 3 and networking12:30 – 13:45
Lunch, Poster Session 3 and networking
12:30
12:45 12:45
13:00 13:00 – 13:45Author Attended Poster Session 3P3-155 – P3-230
13:00
13:15 13:15
13:30 13:30
13:4513:45 – 14:15
Trainee Poster Prize Presentation
13:45
14:00 14:00
14:1514:15 – 15:00
Plenary 8 Early Career Award
14:15
14:30 14:30
14:45 14:45
15:0015:00 – 15:45
Plenary 9 Distinguished Career Award
15:00
15:15 15:15
15:30 15:30
15:4515:45 – 16:15
Coffee, posters and networking15:45 – 16:15
Coffee, posters and networking
15:45
16:00 16:00
16:1516:15 – 17:45Workshop 31
Primary care – prevention of pain chronification starts here!
16:15 – 17:45Workshop 32
Sex and gender effects on pediatric pain: evidence from
healthy and chronic pain patients
16:15 – 17:45Workshop 33
Virtual reality and pain management: the reality of VR
for managing procedural pain in children suffering from acute or
chronic pain
16:15 – 17:45Workshop 34 Environmental,
behavioural, and neuro biological mechanisms of maternal contact
and touch on immediate and long-term pain reactivity and regulation
16:15 – 17:45Workshop 35
It takes two to tango: evaluating the role of parents in psychological interventions for
pediatric chronic pain
16:15
16:30 16:30
16:45 16:45
17:00 17:00
17:15 17:15
17:30 17:30
17:45 17:45
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38
40
40
40
41
41
42 42
3837
41
15
RoomSydney Singapore Rio Osaka Samarkand Poster exhibition
Room
08:0008:00 – 09:00
Media Festival
08:00
08:15 08:15
08:30 08:30
08:45 08:45
09:0009:05 – 10:35Workshop 26
Placebo effects in children: sensory perception, executive
function and potential applications in the clinical
setting
09:05 – 10:35Workshop 27
Rare pain disorders – stories of pins and needles, of genes and
of success!
09:05 – 10:35Workshop 28
Promoting psychological flexibility in youth with chronic pain: evidence from acceptance
and commitment therapies
09:05 – 10:35Workshop 29
Pain in chronic critically ill children: how can parents and
families help?
09:05 – 10:35Workshop 30
Ethics of conducting and publishing placebo/no treatment trials of analgesic effects of pain treatments for acute procedural
pain in infants
09:00
09:15 09:15
09:30 09:30
09:45 09:45
10:00 10:00
10:15 10:15
10:3010:35 – 11:00
Coffee, posters and networking10:35 – 11:00
Coffee, posters and networking
10:30
10:45 10:45
11:0011:00 – 11:45
Plenary 7 Intergenerational pain
transmission
11:00
11:15 11:15
11:30 11:30
11:4511:45 – 12:30
General meeting of members, IASP SIG on pain in childhood
11:45
12:00 12:00
12:15 12:15
12:3012:30 – 13:45
Lunch, Poster Session 3 and networking12:30 – 13:45
Lunch, Poster Session 3 and networking
12:30
12:45 12:45
13:00 13:00 – 13:45Author Attended Poster Session 3P3-155 – P3-230
13:00
13:15 13:15
13:30 13:30
13:4513:45 – 14:15
Trainee Poster Prize Presentation
13:45
14:00 14:00
14:1514:15 – 15:00
Plenary 8 Early Career Award
14:15
14:30 14:30
14:45 14:45
15:0015:00 – 15:45
Plenary 9 Distinguished Career Award
15:00
15:15 15:15
15:30 15:30
15:4515:45 – 16:15
Coffee, posters and networking15:45 – 16:15
Coffee, posters and networking
15:45
16:00 16:00
16:1516:15 – 17:45Workshop 31
Primary care – prevention of pain chronification starts here!
16:15 – 17:45Workshop 32
Sex and gender effects on pediatric pain: evidence from
healthy and chronic pain patients
16:15 – 17:45Workshop 33
Virtual reality and pain management: the reality of VR
for managing procedural pain in children suffering from acute or
chronic pain
16:15 – 17:45Workshop 34 Environmental,
behavioural, and neuro biological mechanisms of maternal contact
and touch on immediate and long-term pain reactivity and regulation
16:15 – 17:45Workshop 35
It takes two to tango: evaluating the role of parents in psychological interventions for
pediatric chronic pain
16:15
16:30 16:30
16:45 16:45
17:00 17:00
17:15 17:15
17:30 17:30
17:45 17:45
PROGRAM OVERVIEW, WEDNESDAY, 19 JUNE 2019
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16
PROGRAM OVERVIEW, THURSDAY, 20 JUNE 2019
RoomSydney
08:00
08:15 08:15 – 08:30 Art and Pain 08:30
08:30 – 09:15Plenary 10
Neuropathic pain 08:45
09:00
09:1509:15 – 10:00
Plenary 11 Communicating with families about pain
09:30
09:45
10:0010:00 – 10:30
Coffee and networking10:15
10:3010:30 – 12:00
Plenary 12 Debate: walking the tightrope of effects:
pros and cons of morphine for neonatal pain
10:45
11:00
11:15
11:30
11:45
12:0012:00 – 12:30
Wrap up, summary, ISPP 2021 12:15
12:30
44
44
44
44
44
17
VENUE OVERVIEW
Rio
SydneySingapore
Posters
Exhibition
LOC Room
Registration Desk
to 3rd
Floorto 3rd
Floorto 3rd
Floor
to MainEntrance
SpeakerService Center
Foyer 2nd Floor
Foyer 3rd Floor
Samarkand
Osaka
2nd Floor
3rd Floor
18
EDUCATION DAY, SUNDAY, 16 JUNE 2019
08:45 – 10:50 Plenary Session 1 Room Sydney (simultaneous translation into English and German)
Chairs: M. Suter, H. Köchlin, CH
08:45 – 08:50 Welcome note of LOC ISPP 2019 & SGSS-SSED E . Cignacco, CH K . Maurer, CH
08:50 – 09:30 Family centered neonatal pain management – opportunities not to be missed
Supported with an educational grant from the University of Lausanne, CH L . Franck, US
09:30 – 10:00 Fear and interoception in children and adolescents with chronic pain T . Hechler, DE
10:00 – 10:30 Sensorial saturation and neonatal pain: a review C . Bellieni, IT
10:30 – 10:50 Questions
10:50 – 11:15 Coffee, posters and networking
11:15 – 12:55 Plenary Session 2 Room Sydney (simultaneous translation into English and German)
Chairs: L. Stoffel, M. Nelle, CH
11:15 – 11:45 Pain free but alert and calm: a balancing act in the difficult to sedate child A .-S . Ramelet, CH
11:45 – 12:15 Results of the European Closeness Survey in NICUs in Europe A . Axelin, FI
12:15 – 12:45 Treatment of chronic pain in children and adolescents B . Zernikow, DE
12:45 – 12:55 Questions
12:55 – 14:00 Lunch, SGSS-SSED poster session and networking
13:00 – 14:00 Poster Session SGSS-SSED Foyer 2nd Floor
19
EDUCATION DAY, SUNDAY, 16 JUNE 2019
Workshops (in different languages, without translation)
14:00 – 15:00 Workshop 1, in English Room Singapore
Chair: S. Jeker, CH
Multimodal analgesia in children: efficacy, safety, and evidence of opioids in pediatric pain treatment S . Friedrichsdorf, US
14:00 – 15:00 Workshop 2, in German Room Rio
Chair: K. Marfurt-Russenberger, CH
Schmerzmanagement durch Hypnose C . Ceppi, CH
14:00 – 15:00 Workshop 3, in French Room Osaka
Chair: M. Suter, CH
Prise en charge interdisciplinaire des douleurs chroniques fonctionnelles de l’enfant et de l’adolescent au CHUV A . Deppen, CH M . Hofer, CH B . Wosinski, CH J .-B . Armengaud, CH
14:00 – 15:00 Workshop 4, in Italian Room Samarkand
Chair: E. Cignacco, CH
Come individuare il dolore infantile, superando i limiti delle scale di valutazione del dolore C . Bellieni, IT
15:00 – 15:30 Coffee, posters and networking
20
EDUCATION DAY, SUNDAY, 16 JUNE 2019
Workshops (in different languages, without translation)
15:30 – 16:30 Workshop 5, in English Room Singapore
Chair: H. Köchlin, CH
Communication with parents about chronic pain of their child N . Schechter, US
15:30 – 16:30 Workshop 6, in English Room Rio
Chair: L. Stoffel, CH
How to detect infants’ pain, overcoming the flaws of pain scales C . Bellieni, IT
15:30 – 16:30 Workshop 7, in German Room Osaka
Chair: W. Ruppen, CH
Ambulante interdisziplinäre Schmerzsprechstunde – Essentielles anhand konkreter Fälle W . Ruppen, CH T . von Glasenap, CH U . Hildebrandt, CH U . Fuchs, CH
15:30 – 16:30 Workshop 8, in French Room Samarkand
Chair: Marc Suter, CH
Une approche centrée sur le patient et la famille pour assurer le confort chez les enfants aux soins intensifs A .-S . Ramelet, CH E . Spinella, CH
16:40 – 17:10 Plenary Session 3 Room Sydney
Experiences of children and their families
17:15 – 18:00 General Meeting of Members SGSS-SSED Room Sydney
18:00 – 19:30 Welcome Reception Foyer 2nd Floor
Please find more details on page 68 .
21
SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM, MONDAY, 17 JUNE 2019
08:30 – 09:00 Official Opening Room Sydney
Welcome words of the President of the Special Interest Group on Pain in Childhood A . Fernandes, PT
Welcome words of the Chair of the Scientific Program Committee G . A . Walco, US
Welcome words of the Chair of the Local Organization Committee E . Cignacco, CH
Welcome words of the Health Minister of Basel City L . Engelberger, CH
Welcome words of the Director of Department of Health Professions, Bern University of Applied Sciences U . Brügger, CH
09:00 – 09:15 Art and Pain Room Sydney
Chair: E. Cignacco, CH
Dolography – the visual communication tool for pain therapy S . Affolter, CH
09:15 – 10:00 Plenary 1 Room Sydney
Chair: G. Walco, US
Opioids – a balance between pain treatment and misuse and diversion E . J . Krane, US
10:00 – 10:30 Coffee, posters and networking
10:30 – 11:15 Plenary 2 Room Sydney
Chair: M. Bueno, CA
Placebo and nocebo in infants and children L . Vase Toft, DK
22
SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM, MONDAY, 17 JUNE 2019
11:15 – 12:00 Plenary 3 Room Sydney
Chair: R. Grunau, CA
Trauma, vulnerability and pain M . Ranger, CA
12:00 – 13:30 Lunch, Poster Session 1 and networking
12:30 – 13:30 Author Attended Poster Session 1 Foyer 2nd Floor
13:30 – 14:00 Plenary 4 Room Sydney
Chair: J. Collins, AU
Electronic Persistent Pain Outcomes Collaboration (EPPOC) H . Tardif, AU
14:05 – 15:35 Parallel Workshop Session 1: Workshops 1 – 4, 19
14:05 – 15:35 Workshop 1: Room Sydney Understanding non-acute pain in neonates and infants –
Where are we at?
Chair: K.J.S. Anand, US
14:05 – 14:25 All pain is not the same! Proposed frameworks for thinking about non-acute newborn pain K .J .S . Anand, US
14:25 – 14:45 Defining chronic pain in neonates, a Delphi survey C .-J . van Ganzewinkel, NL
14:45 – 15:05 Understanding the acute pain responding for infants who are chronically pained: contextual factors R . Pillai Riddell, CA
15:05 – 15:25 Definitions and prevalence of non-acute pain in hospitalised infants: A systematic review and meta-analysis E . Ilhan, AU
23
SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM, MONDAY, 17 JUNE 2019
14:05 – 15:35 Workshop 2: Room Singapore The perils are plentiful, but the prizes are palpable:
dissemination and implementation of evidence for improved acute pediatric pain treatment across international settings
Chair: B. Stevens, CA
14:05 – 14:25 Implementation of the Implementation of Infant Pain Practice Change (ImPaC) resource in NICUs B . Stevens, CA
14:25 – 14:45 Implementation of a children’s comfort promise in six North-American children’s hospitals S . Friedrichsdorf, US
14:45 – 15:05 Implementation of a novel KT system for mass vaccination of children A . Taddio, CA
14:05 – 15:35 Workshop 3: Room Rio The neurobiology of developing pain pathways
Chair: M. Jankowski, US
14:05 – 14:25 Peripheral mechanisms of pediatric pain M . Jankowski, US
14:25 – 14:45 Genetic dissection of spinal circuits involved in somatosensation S . Koch, UK
14:45 – 15:05 The somatosensory memory of neonatal injury S . Walker, UK
14:05 – 15:35 Workshop 4: Room Osaka Applying a transdiagnostic lens to childhood chronic pain:
examining shared mechanisms between pediatric pain and mental health disorders
Chair: K. Jastrowski Mano, US
14:05 – 14:25 Executive functioning in pediatric chronic pain K . Jastrowski Mano, US
14:25 – 14:45 Information-Processing biases in pediatric chronic pain L . Heathcote, US
14:45 – 15:05 Mood symptoms in adolescence predict functional impairment in adulthood: Results from a longitudinal study of juvenile fibromyalgia S . Kashikar-Zuck, US
24
SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM, MONDAY, 17 JUNE 2019
14:05 – 15:35 Workshop 19: Room Samarkand Home alone – pediatric pain assessment and
management at home
Chair: Y. Zisk Rony, IL
14:05 – 14:25 Parental pain knowledge and practices at home for children and young adults with Cerebral Palsy (CP) Y . Zisk Rony, IL
14:25 – 14:45 Cultural differences and similarities of parents treating child cancer pain at home N . Shoshani, IL
14:45 – 15:05 Pain buddy M . A . Fortier, US
15:35 – 16:00 Coffee, posters and networking
16:00 – 17:30 Parallel Workshop Session 2: Workshops 6 – 10
16:00 – 17:30 Workshop 6: Room Sydney What can imaging brain activity tells us about pain
and its consequences in infants and children?
Chair: R. Slater, UK
16:00 – 16:20 Brain imaging provides an objective tool for measuring pain-related brain activity in infants R . Slater, UK
16:20 – 16:40 MRI reveals long-term consequences of pain in early life R . Grunau, CA
16:40 – 17:00 Understanding pain and consciousness in neonates H . Lagercrantz, SE
17:00 – 17:20 MRI reveals structural and functional connectivity shaping early pain perception F . Moultrie, UK
25
SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM, MONDAY, 17 JUNE 2019
16:00 – 17:30 Workshop 7: Room Singapore Paying attention to distraction: a critical
consideration of distraction mechanisms and effectiveness in acute and chronic pain contexts
Chair: L. Caes, UK
16:00 – 16:20 Comparing active versus passive distraction, with or without parental psycho-education, as a pain management technique during venepunctures L . Caes, UK
16:20 – 16:40 Distraction as a coping strategy in chronic pain M . McMurtry, CA
16:40 – 17:00 Distraction or acceptance? The utility of ACT and the role of neuropsychiatric factors in predicting outcome R . Wicksell, SE
17:00 – 17:20 Using review evidence to identify knowledge gaps and advance the science of distraction K . Birnie, CA
16:00 – 17:30 Workshop 8: Room Rio Acknowledging the “elephant in the room”:
uncertainty in the context of pediatric pain
Chair: A. Jordan, UK
16:00 – 16:20 A clinical taboo: clinicians’ experiences of managing diagnostic uncertainty in a paediatric clinical context A . Jordan, UK
16:20 – 16:40 The pediatric period: diagnostic uncertainty in youth with chronic pain and their parents M . Noel, CA
16:40 – 17:00 Using pain neuroscience education to enhance communication and connection between providers and patient families L . Simons, US
17:00 – 17:20 The survivorship context: living with pain-related uncertainty after childhood cancer L . Heathcote, US
26
SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM, MONDAY, 17 JUNE 2019
16:00 – 17:30 Workshop 9: Room Osaka Sources of individual variability when using objective
measures of paediatric pain
Chair: L. Jones, UK
16:00 – 16:20 Patterns of pain-related cortical responses and the effects of age and sex L . Jones, UK
16:20 – 16:40 Capturing the variability in infant pain responses using behavioral cues M . DiLorenzo, CA
16:40 – 17:00 Pain profiles in adolescents with juvenile idiopathic arthritis and the underlying mechanisms A . Learoyd, UK
16:00 – 17:30 Workshop 10: Room Samarkand Biological influences on adolescent pain: sex, stress,
and inflammation
Chair: H. Nahman-Averbuch, US
16:00 – 16:20 The effect of testosterone levels on pain sensitivity H . Nahman-Averbuch, US
16:20 – 16:40 The effect of stress on fear learning and extinction in youth with chronic pain I . Timmers, US
16:40 – 17:00 Chronic pelvic pain in adolescents with endometriosis: the role of psychophysical and inflammatory factors in the development of central sensitization C . Sieberg, US
27
SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM, TUESDAY, 18 JUNE 2019
08:00 – 08:15 Art and Pain Room Sydney
Chair: E. Cignacco, CH
Meaning of pain in christian society, meaning of pain as expression of suffering E . Reifert, CH
08:15 – 09:00 Plenary 5 Room Sydney
Chair: E. Cignacco, CH
Neonatal pain: pharmacology J . van den Anker, CH
09:00 – 09:45 Plenary 6 Room Sydney
Chair: D. Tibboel, NL
Pain treatment in developing countries: reducing the gap F .O . Oyebola, NI
09:45 – 10:15 Coffee, posters and networking
10:15 – 11:45 Parallel Workshop Session 3: Workshops 11, 12, 13, 25, 16
28
SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM, TUESDAY, 18 JUNE 2019
10:15 – 11:45 Workshop 11: Room Sydney Trauma and pediatric pain: translational examinations
of cognitive, behavioural, interpersonal, and neurobiological mechanisms
Chair: M. Noel, CA
10:15 – 10:35 Unravelling the relationship between adverse childhood experiences, post-traumatic stress, and pediatric chronic pain: an integrative examination M . Noel, CA
10:35 – 10:55 Epigenetic and inflammatory mechanisms underlying early life trauma and adolescent pain R . Mychasiuk, AU
10:55 – 11:15 The relations between acute and posttraumatic stress and painful medical procedures in children hospitalized in the Paediatric Intensive Care Unit J . Gold, US
11:15 – 11:35 Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs) in youth with chronic pain: incidence and phenomenology of potential underlying mechanisms S . Nelson, US
10:15 – 11:45 Workshop 12: Room Singapore Beyond family-centered care: youth and families
as partners in pediatric chronic pain program planning, evaluation, and research
Chair: K. Birnie, CA
10:15 – 10:35 Building sustainable and meaningful engagement of patients and families in pediatric chronic pain research and care K . Birnie, CA
10:35 – 10:55 Patient and families as partners in clinical service improvement E . Kepreotes, AU
10:55 – 11:15 How can teachers increase their understanding of issues faced by young children who live with chronic pain? S . O’Higgins, IE
11:15 – 11:35 Listening to youth with pain-related disability and their parents in designing and implementing an evaluation for an interdisciplinary pain treatment program K . Hurtubise, CA
29
SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM, TUESDAY, 18 JUNE 2019
10:15 – 11:45 Workshop 13: Room Rio “Why Me?” Individual differences in susceptibility
to pain in little rodents and little people
Chair: J. Mogil, CA
10:15 – 10:35 Lots of pain in little people and little rodents? Genetic and environmental risk factors J . Mogil, CA
10:35 – 10:55 Nature versus nurture: exploring vulnerabilities of children and adolescents with chronic pain S . Friedrichsdorf, US
10:55 – 11:15 Chronic postsurgical pain in children: resolution and persistence J . Rabbitts, US
10:15 – 11:45 Workshop 25: Room Osaka Innovative methods of assessment and treatment of
chronic pain in pediatric sickle cell disease: unraveling the acute to chronic pain transition
Chair: S. Sil, US
10:15 – 10:35 Identifying youth with chronic sickle cell pain: How pain and psychosocial functioning change over time S . Sil, US
10:35 – 10:55 Mechanisms of pain in sickle cell disease: thinking outside of the sickled cell A . Brandow, US
10:55 – 11:15 User-centerd adaption of the iCanCope self-management platform for youth with sickle cell pain J . Stinson, CA
30
SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM, TUESDAY, 18 JUNE 2019
10:15 – 11:45 Workshop 16: Room Samarkand Thinking outside the diagnostic box: advancing how
we think, write and talk about children’s pain
Chair: J. Kossowsky, CH
10:15 – 10:35 Giving pain a name: the implications of nomenclature N . Schechter, US
10:35 – 10:55 Words that hurt and words that heal: the therapeutic encounter as a tool to manage children’s pain T . Oberlander, CA
10:55 – 11:15 Harnessing psychosocial and non-specific treatment approaches in pediatric primary pain J . Kossowsky, CH
11:15 – 11:35 Reframing chronic pain: lessons learned from past trials and implications for future research H . Köchlin, CH
11:45 – 13:30 Lunch, Poster Session 2 and networking
12:30 – 13:30 Author Attended Poster Session 2 Foyer 2nd Floor
31
SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM, TUESDAY, 18 JUNE 2019
13:30 – 15:00 Parallel Workshop Session 4: Workshops 15, 17, 18, 5, 20
13:30 – 15:00 Workshop 15: Room Sydney Comparing apples to apples? A multidisciplinary
examination of the efficacy of intensive interdisciplinary pain treatment for youth with abdominal pain, headache, or musculoskeletal pain
Chair: S. Williams, US
13:30 – 13:50 Changes in functional disability and pain for pediatric IIPT patients with abdominal pain, headache, and musculoskeletal pain S . Williams, US
13:50 – 14:10 What are the impacts of IIPT? The experiences and perceptions of youth with chronic pain and their parents K . Hurtubise, CA
14:10 – 14:30 Psychological similarities and differences amongst pediatric IIPT patients with abdominal pain, headache, and musculoskeletal pain C . Conroy, US
14:30 – 14:50 Measuring physical function and disability in children with non-musculoskeletal pain complaints J . Shulman, US
13:30 – 15:00 Workshop 17: Room Singapore Pain in children and adolescents with intellectual
and developmental disabilities – time to act!
Chair: F. Symons, US
13:30 – 13:50 Do we know what we need to know to act now to assess pain in children with IDD? F . Symons, US
13:50 – 14:10 Clinical implementation of evidence-based pain assessment and treatment practices in IDD C . Barney, US
14:10 – 14:30 Tell us about pain and what will make it better – devising a patient/parent-directed pain intervention in children/adolescents with cerebral palsy – The CPPain-project R .D . Andersen, NO
14:30 – 14:50 Let’s talk about pain: Improving respite workers’ pain-related knowledge and skill use through an empirically-informed training program L . Genik, CA
32
SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM, TUESDAY, 18 JUNE 2019
13:30 – 15:00 Workshop 18: Room Rio The bigger picture: the role of social, emotional,
and cognitive development in shaping pain responses across early childhood
Chair: R. Pillai Riddell, CA
13:30 – 13:50 Managing infant pain: is preventing insensitivity better than promoting sensitivity? R . Pillai Riddell, CA
13:50 – 14:10 Children’s ability to provide multi-dimensional self-report of acute pain experiences: cognitive-developmental factors T . Jaaniste, AU
14:10 – 14:30 The role of caregiver responses in shaping pre-schoolers pain responses in natural settings L . Caes, UK
14:30 – 14:50 Co-constructing the past: examining mother- and father-child narratives about past events involving pain versus sadness M . Pavlova, CA
13:30 – 15:00 Workshop 5: Room Osaka Clinical application of mindfulness for adolescents
with chronic pain conditions and their parents lessons learned from in person to eHealth modalities
Chair: D. Ruskin, CA
13:30 – 13:50 Findings from an 8 week in-person mindfulness group: specific content adaptations for adolescents with chronic pain D . Ruskin, CA
13:50 – 14:10 Mindfulness treatment for parents to support adolescent coping and family functioning D . Wallace, US
14:10 – 14:30 Providing Acceptance and Commitment Therapy online to adolescents: lessons learned and things to consider D . Ruskin, CA
33
SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM, TUESDAY, 18 JUNE 2019
13:30 – 15:00 Workshop 20: Room Samarkand The Asian experience – prevalence and parenting needs
Chair: Z. Jamil Osman, MY
13:30 – 13:50 The prevalence of chronic pain amongst adolescents and associated psychosocial factors in Selangor, Malaysia Z . Jamil Osman, MY
13:50 – 14:10 Understanding parents’ perceptions of their child’s pain and working effectively with them to improve outcomes J . Especkerman, SG
14:10 – 14:30 Asian parenting in a child with chronic pain N . Jayakrishnan, SG
15:00 – 15:30 Coffee, posters and networking
15:30 – 17:00 Parallel Workshop Session 5: Workshops 21 – 24, 14
15:30 – 17:00 Workshop 21: Room Sydney Exploring the critical role of parents in pediatric pain:
from managing needles to complex rehabilitation
Chair: C.M. McMurtry, CA
15:30 – 15:50 Parenting in acute pain contexts: state of the art and future directions C .M . McMurtry, CA
15:50 – 16:10 Bouncing back: parental resilience in the context of pediatric chronic pain A . Jordan, UK
16:10 – 16:30 Do parents need to change? Parent mediation of child improvements in interdisciplinary treatment J . Gauntlett-Gilbert, UK
16:30 – 16:50 Parent experiences of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) treatment for pediatric chronic pain M . Kanstrup, SE
34
SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM, TUESDAY, 18 JUNE 2019
15:30 – 17:00 Workshop 22: Room Singapore Tackling the problem of infant pain relief –
multidimensional approaches to assessing analgesics
Chair: C. Hartley, UK
15:30 – 15:50 Investigating analgesic efficacy and safety in infants using physiology C . Hartley, UK
15:50 – 16:10 Fentanyl for procedural pain in infants C . McNair, CA
16:10 – 16:30 Pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of analgesics in infants J . van den Anker, CH
16:30 – 16:50 Using noxious-evoked brain activity to assess analgesic efficacy in infants D . Gursul, UK
15:30 – 17:00 Workshop 23: Room Rio Mind-body perspectives on chronic post surgical pain
in children: role of parent-family interactions, genetics- epigenetics and mindfulness based meditation
Chair: V. Chidambaran, US
15:30 – 15:50 Genomic and epigenetic enriched processes influencing chronic postsurgical pain and anxiety sensitivity in children V . Chidambaran, US
15:50 – 16:10 Parent-child interactions and psychosocial factors in pediatric chronic postsurgical pain C . Sieberg, US
16:10 – 16:30 Mindfulness-based analgesia and anxiety relief: efficacy and unique mechanisms regulating pain F . Zeidan, US
35
SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM, TUESDAY, 18 JUNE 2019
15:30 – 17:00 Workshop 24: Room Osaka Quantitative sensory testing in pediatric pain:
methods, perspectives and applications
Chair: S. Walker, UK
15:30 – 15:50 Conditioned Pain Modulation in children, adolescents, and young adults S . Walker, UK
15:50 – 16:10 Bridging bench and bedside: developing novel therapies for sensory abnormalities in children L . Cornelissen, US
16:10 – 16:30 QST in pediatric patients with Cerebral Palsy (CP) implicates a neuropathic genesis of pain syndromes M . Blankenburg, DE
16:30 – 16:50 Practical perspectives on the use of QST in pediatric pain research P . Tutelman, CA
15:30 – 17:00 Workshop 14: Room Samarkand Bringing pediatric pain management into the 21st century:
using learning health systems to engage patients and families in individualized pain assessment and treatment
Chair: R. Bhandari, US
15:30 – 15:50 Leverage LHS registries to actively engage the patient and family in pain management treatment R . Bhandari, US
15:50 – 16:10 What to consider when implementing a LHS registry E . Scott, US
16:10 – 16:30 How an LHS fosters a shared understanding of youth presenting with overlapping pain conditions D . Logan, US
16:30 – 16:50 Utilization of learning health systems to enhance clinical intervention and research in pediatric chronic conditions M . Miller, US
36
SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM, TUESDAY, 18 JUNE 2019
17:00 – 17:40 Special Lecture Médecins Sans Frontières Room Sydney
How to address pediatric pain management in a humanitarian setting: practical insights from MSF on challenges and successes in the field J . Brandenberger, CH
19:30 – 22:30 Gala Dinner Elisabethenkirche Basel
Please find more details on page 68 .
37
SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM, WEDNESDAY, 19 JUNE 2019
08:00 – 09:00 Media Festival Room Sydney
Videos covering different aspects of pediatric pain will be screened Dr . L . Kuttner, CA
09:05 – 10:35 Parallel Workshop Session 6: Workshops 26–30
09:05 – 10:35 Workshop 26: Room Sydney Placebo effects in children: sensory perception, executive
function and potential applications in the clinical setting
Chair: T. Oberlander, CA
09:05 – 09:25 Setting the scene: the developmental nature of the placebo effect in children T . Oberlander, CA
09:25 – 09:45 What is minimally required to obtain placebo analgesia? Age, cognition and the neural correlates of the placebo effect K . Jensen, SE
09:45 – 10:05 Executive function mediates the association between sensory discrimination of thermal stimuli and the nocebo effect in youth R . Neuenschwander, CH
10:05 – 10:25 Internal states of low self-efficacy can induce learned nocebo effects on thermal sensation in youth E . Weik, CA
38
SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM, WEDNESDAY, 19 JUNE 2019
09:05 – 10:35 Workshop 27: Room Singapore Rare pain disorders – stories of pins and needles,
of genes and of success!
Chair: B. Zernikow, DE
09:05 – 09:25 Paroxysmal hemicrania and other trigeminal autonomic cephalalgias in children – from symptoms to long term outcome! B . Zernikow, DE
09:25 – 09:45 Erythromelalgia, paroxysmal extreme pain and related conditions – genes and challenges C . Berde, US
09:45 – 10:05 Migraine or Carl the chameleon – spooky phenotypes and wild genotypes J . Kossowsky, CH
09:05 – 10:35 Workshop 28: Room Rio Promoting psychological flexibility in youth with chronic
pain: evidence from acceptance and commitment therapies
Chair: R. Wicksell, SE
09:05 – 09:25 Psychological flexibility as a predictor of physical and psychosocial functioning in youth with chronic pain and youth undergoing a major surgery M . Beeckman, BE
09:25 – 09:45 Acceptance and commitment therapy in adolescents with Inflammatory Bowel Disease: living with uncertainty and relapsing and remitting pain D . Ruskin, CA
09:45 – 10:05 Open clinical trial of acceptance and commitment therapy for children and adolescents with chronic pain – outcome and characteristics of responders R . Wicksell, SE
39
SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM, WEDNESDAY, 19 JUNE 2019
09:05 – 10:35 Workshop 29: Room Osaka Pain in chronic critically ill children: how can parents
and families help?
Chair: A.S. Ramelet, CH
09:05 – 09:25 Involvement of parents in pain management: what does the literature say about chronic critically ill children? A .S . Ramelet, CH
09:25 – 09:45 How parents and healthcare professionals experience the hospitalization of children with chronic conditions C . Tosin, IT
09:45 – 10:05 How to best prepare parents to be engaged in pain management of their child B . Carter, UK
09:05 – 10:35 Workshop 30: Room Samarkand Ethics of conducting and publishing placebo/no
treatment trials of analgesic effects of pain treatments for acute procedural pain in infants
Chair: D. Harrison, CA
09:05 – 09:25 Ethics of conducting placebo/no treatment trials of analgesic effects of sweet solutions in newborns and young infants D . Harrison, CA
09:25 – 09:45 Ethics of publishing placebo/no treatment trials in pediatric pain C . Chambers, CA
09:45 – 10:05 Biomedical ethics perspectives of the controversy surrounding placebo/no treatment groups in acute pain studies on infants A . Shriver, UK
10:35 – 11:00 Coffee, posters and networking
40
SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM, WEDNESDAY, 19 JUNE 2019
11:00 – 11:45 Plenary 7 Room Sydney
Chair: J. Rabbitts, US
Intergenerational pain transmission A .C . Willson, US
11:45 – 12:30 General meeting of members, IASP SIG Room Sydney on pain in childhood
12:30 – 13:45 Lunch, Poster Session 3 and networking
13:00 – 13:45 Author Attended Poster Session 3 Foyer 2nd Floor
13:45 – 14:15 Trainee Poster Prize Presentation Room Sydney
Psychological distress in childhood increases the risk of back pain in adolescence. A prospective cohort study Amabile Borges Dario, The University of Sydney, AU
Skin-to-skin care reduces nociceptive brain activity in human newborns Laura Jones, University College London, UK
Can parent and infant behaviours during vaccination tell us about preschool attachment status? Monica O’Neill, York University, CA
Preliminary support for improvements in parents’ responses to children’s chronic pain with a moderate level of parent intervention in an intensive interdisciplinary pain rehabilitation program Michele Tsai Owens, Seattle Children’s Hospital, US
Remembering past pain and expecting future pain: a preliminary analysis on the role of child attention to pain and parental (non-) pain attentive behavior Aline Wauters, Ghent University, BE
41
SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM, WEDNESDAY, 19 JUNE 2019
14:15 – 15:00 Plenary 8: Early Career Award Room Sydney
Affective-motivational dynamics in the interpersonal context of child pain: critical reflections and future challenges T . Vervoort, BE
15:00 – 15:45 Plenary 9: Distinguished Career Award Room Sydney
Infant pain: a multidisciplinary journey R . Grunau, CA
15:45 – 16:15 Coffee, posters and networking
16:15 – 17:45 Parallel Workshop Sessions 7: Workshops 31–35
16:15 – 17:45 Workshop 31: Room Sydney Primary care – prevention of pain chronification
starts here!
Chair: J. Wager, DE
16:15 – 16:35 Patient and parents expectations in primary care – what are physicians supposed to do? J . Wager, DE
16:35 – 16:55 The course of abdominal pain in primary care – can we predict outcome? G .A . Holtman, NL
16:55 – 17:15 New treatment approaches in primary care – can we improve outcome? C . Liossi, UK
42
SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM, WEDNESDAY, 19 JUNE 2019
16:15 – 17:45 Workshop 32: Room Singapore Sex and gender effects on pediatric pain: evidence
from healthy and chronic pain patients
Chair: H. Nahman-Averbuch US
16:15 – 16:35 The role of puberty on sex differences in pain H . Nahman-Averbuch, US
16:35 – 16:55 A developmental perspective on sex differences in pain C . Chambers, CA
16:55 – 17:15 Gender biases in adult pediatric pain ratings L . Cohen, US
16:15 – 17:45 Workshop 33: Room Rio Virtual reality and pain management: the reality of VR
for managing procedural pain in children suffering from acute or chronic pain
Chair: S. Le May, CA
16:15 – 16:35 The reality of Virtual Reality for managing acute and chronic pain J .I . Gold, US
16:35 – 16:55 Distraction using Virtual Reality for procedural pain management in children undergoing orthopedic and burn care S . Le May, CA
16:55 – 17:15 Virtual Reality distraction for Adolescents with cancer undergoing painful procedures J .N . Stinson, CA
43
SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM, WEDNESDAY, 19 JUNE 2019
16:15 – 17:45 Workshop 34: Room Osaka Environmental, behavioural, and neurobiological
mechanisms of maternal contact and touch on immediate and long-term pain reactivity and regulation
Chair: M. Campbell-Yeo, CA
16:15 – 16:35 The neurobiology of nurturing touch F . McGlone, UK
16:35 – 16:55 Translational animal models for the study of neonatal pain and maternal care S . Brummelte, US
16:55 – 17:15 Impact of maternal care provided in early life on later pain response, neurodevelopment and regulation M . Campbell-Yeo, CA
17:15 – 17:35 The influence of breastfeeding on cortical activity during procedures in full term neonates: findings of the iCAP randomized controlled trial B . Benoit, CA
16:15 – 17:45 Workshop 35: Room Samarkand It takes two to tango: evaluating the role of parents
in psychological interventions for pediatric chronic pain
Chair: I. Timmers, US
16:15 – 16:35 Parental influences on child’s chronic pain in the context of GET living: an exposure-based treatment I . Timmers, US
16:35 – 16:55 2B Active: treating pain-related fear in adolescents and parents with chronic pain J . Verbunt, NL
16:55 – 17:15 Parent pain reactivity and psychological flexibility as predictors of treatment outcome in Acceptance and Commitment Therapy for children and adolescents with chronic pain V . Zetterqvist, SE
17:15 – 17:35 Longitudinal changes in parent factors in response to internet-delivered CBT for pediatric functional abdominal pain A . Stone, US
44
SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM, THURSDAY, 20 JUNE 2019
08:15 – 08:30 Art and Pain Room Sydney
Chair: E. Cignacco, CH
Medication in chronically ill patients E . Reifert, CH
08:30 – 09:15 Plenary 10 Room Sydney
Chair: L. Simons, US
Neuropathic pain A . LeBel, US
09:15 – 10:00 Plenary 11 Room Sydney
Chair: G. Walco, US
Communicating with families about pain N . Schechter, US
10:00 – 10:30 Coffee and networking
10:30 – 12:00 Plenary 12 Room Sydney
Chair: R. Slater, UK
Debate – walking the tightrope of effects: pros and cons of morphine for neonatal pain R . Grunau, CA D . Tibboel, NL
12:00 – 12:30 Wrap up, summary, ISPP 2021 Room Sydney
Chair: A. Fernandes, PT
45
POSTERS
Posters are displayed and presented in three different sessions at the following times:
Poster Session Presentation Day Presence at Poster
Poster Mounting Time
Poster Removal Time
Session SGSS – SSED (P01 – P05)
Sunday, 16 June 2019
13:00 – 13:45 Sunday, 16 June 2019 08:00 – 09:30
Sunday, 16 June 2019 17:00 – 17:15
Session 1 (P1-01 – P1-77)
Monday, 17 June 2019
12:30 – 13:30 Monday, 17 June 2019 08:00 – 09:30
Monday, 17 June 2019 17:30 – 17:45
Session 2 (P2-78 – P2-154)
Tuesday, 18 June 2019
12:30 – 13:30 Tuesday, 18 June 2019 07:30 – 09:00
Tuesday, 18 June 2019 17:00 – 17:15
Session 3 (P3-155 – P3-230)
Wednesday, 19 June 2019
13:00 – 13:45 Wednesday, 19 June 2019 07:30 – 09:00
Wednesday, 19 June 2019 17:45 – 18:00
Presenters are kindly requested to stand by their poster during the Poster Session . The mounting and removal times are to be strictly adhered to . If the poster has not been removed by the end of the allocated removal time, it will be disposed of by congress staff (posters can be collected only during the congress) .
Material to mount the posters will be available at the poster desk in the poster area .
46
POSTER SESSION SGSS-SSED, SUNDAY, 16 JUNE 2019
P01 Somatosensory Profiles in Patients with nonSpecific Neck Arm Pain with and without positive Neurodynamic TestsK. Böttger, B. Tampin, N. Ballenberger, G. Landmann, L. Stockinger, A. B. Schmid (Nottwil, CH; Perth, Curtin, AU; Osnabrück, DE; Oxford, UK)
P02Low-intensity sinusoidal electrical stimulation in patients with peripheral neuropathic pain G. Landmann , L. Stockinger, M. Schmelz, R. Rukwied (Nottwil, CH; Heidelberg, DE)
P03Pain Response to Open Label Placebo in Induced Acute Pain in Healthy Adult Males T. Schneider, J. Luethy, E. Mauermann, O. Bandschapp, W. Ruppen (Basel, CH)
P04Die Rolle von Ketamin i.v. und Methadon p.o. zur Behandlung von Cluster Kopfschmerzen. Beobachtungsstudie Nr. 2L. Granata, L. Sakellaris (Zurich, CH; Vienna, AT)
P05Enriched Environment - PCSCG. Kirchmann, M. Suter, I. Decosterd, P. Chu Sin Chung (Lausanne, CH)
47
AUTHOR ATTENDED POSTER SESSION 1, MONDAY, 17 JUNE 2019
1-01 Chronic pain concepts and provision in Swiss pediatriciansM. Carlander, H. Koechlin, C. Locher, A. Woerner, J. Dratva (Basel, Winterthur, CH; Tromso, NO; Boston, US; Plymouth, UK)
1-02Behavioral and neuroanatomical outcomes of altered serotonin combined with a hypoxic-ischemic injury using a neonate rodent modelX. Cong, S. Casavant, A. Starkweather, R. Fitch (Storrs, US)
1-03Paediatric post discharge pain: parent views of support from an Australian Nurse Practitioner Led Acute Pain ServiceE. Forster, C. Kotzur, J. Richards, J. Gilmour, D. Duff (Brisbane, Ipswich, AU)
1-04Characterizing social and academic aspects of school anxiety in pediatric chronic painR. Gibler, E. Beckmann, X. Song, A. Lynch-Jordan, S. Kashikar-Zuck, K. Jastrowski Mano (Cincinnati, US)
1-05Quality of life in youth with chronic pain: youth and parent resilience and risk factorsS. Lee, C.M. McMurtry, C. Summers, K. Edwards, N. Elik, M. Lumley (Guelph, Hamilton, London, CA)
1-06A multi-method examination into the connections between parent and child emotions during child acute painR. Moline, K. Constantin, M. McMurtry (Guelph, CA)
1-07Conditioned placebo and nocebo-like effects in youth: the role self-efficacy, hope and anxietyE. Weik, R. Neuenschwander, C.M. Tipper, K. Jensen, T.F. Oberlander (Vancouver, CA; Bern, CH; Stockholm, SE)
1-08‘Participation of paediatric caregiver on acute pain assessment and management in young children’: perspectives of final year medical and nursing students, a qualitative studyK. Win, N. Marimuthu, G. Rudie, M. Lal (Batu Pahat, Melaka, Seremban, MY)
1-09Cumulative pain/stress, gut microbiome and neurodevelopment in preterm infantsX. Cong, W. Xu, W. Henderson (Bethesda, Farmington, Storrs, US)
1-10Impaired attention and memory deficits in juvenile-onset fibromyalgiaK. Jastrowski Mano, E. Beckmann, L. Fussner, S. Kashikar-Zuck (Cincinnati, New Haven, US)
1-11Telomere length and salivary cortisol stress reactivity in very preterm infantsL. Provenzi, R. Giorda, M. Fumagalli, F. Mosca, R. Borgatti, R. Montirosso (Bosisio Parini, Milano, IT)
1-12Pain management during vaccination in primary care: preliminary results of a Portuguese national surveyC. Abadesso, D. Cruz, A. Fernandes, A. Taddio (Amadora, Coimbra, Lisbon, Évora, PT; Toronto, CA)
48
AUTHOR ATTENDED POSTER SESSION 1, MONDAY, 17 JUNE 2019
1-13Effects of pain on function, fatigue & health related quality of life in pediatric cancer patientsL. Bravo, M.D. Nunes-Rodrigues, L.C. Nascimento, A. Fernanda, E. Jacob (Chapel Hill, Los Angeles, US; Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo, BR; Coimbra, PT)
1-14Computer-based automatic assessment of pain in children: fusion of electrodermal activity and facial expression data via machine learningB. Susam, X. Xu, M. Akcakaya, V. de Sa, H. Nezamfar, K. Craig, M. Goodwin, J. Huang (Boston, La Jolla, Pittsburgh, US; Vancouver, CA)
1-15Post operative pain assessment: validity of EVENDOL scoreP. Delmon, H. Dame Sghaier, B. Tourniaire, A. Gallo, A.C. Chary Tardy, M. Galinski, P. Cimerman, F. Lassauge, N. Schinkel, M.C. Schommer, B. Falissard, E. Fournier Charriere (Besançon, Bordeaux, Dijon, Paris, Rouen, FR; Liège, BE)
1-16How do primary care practitioners treat migraine in children?M. Dupe, M. Galinski, B. Tourniaire (Bordeaux, Paris, FR)
1-17Experiences of needle procedures in relation to type 1 diabetes – a case studyM. Forsner, S. Nilsson, L. Hanberger, A. Lindholm Olinder, E. Mörelius (Gothenburg, Linköping, Stockholm, Umeå, SE; Perth, AU)
1-18Assessing the moderating role of parent insensitive behaviours on the relationship between parent and infant physiology post-needleH. Gennis, M. Dilorenzo, S. Badovinac, R. Pillai Riddell, H. Garfield (Toronto, CA)
1-19Using repeated measures methods to characterize trajectories and estimate test-retest reliability of temporal summation of second painG.T. Han, A.S. Stone, A.J. Tomarken, S. Bruehl, L.S. Walker (Nashville, US)
1-20Evaluation of manually inflated cuff algometry in paediatric chronic pain patients: an exploratory studyD. Champion, A. Kersch, P. Perera, S. Sarraf, T. Jaaniste (Sydney, AU)
1-21Nursing students’ knowledge and attitudes regarding paediatric pain: testing convergent validity for two instrumentsA. Kusi Amponsah, V. Bam, J. Kyei-Dompim, E. Oduro, C.K. Ahoto, A. Axelin (Turku, FI; Kumasi, GH)
1-22A simple tool to measure procedural restraint intensity in children: validation of the PRIC (Procedural Restraint Intensity in Children) scaleB. Lombart, D. Annequin, P. Cimerman, C. De Stefano, O. Perrinb, C. Bouchart, M.-C. Schommer, L. Ramelot, C. Petit, E. Fournier-Charriere, A. Caron (Paris e Arrondissement, FR)
49
AUTHOR ATTENDED POSTER SESSION 1, MONDAY, 17 JUNE 2019
1-23Sociodemographic risk factors and learning disorders among Hungarian adolescents with chronic painJ. Major, S. Ádám (Budapest, HU)
1-24Movement disorders in pediatric complex regional pain syndrome: a 5-year review of clinical presentation and outcomesA. Hundert, G. Mesaroli, F. Campbell, D. Ruskin, S. Kronenberg, S. Klein, J. Stinson (Toronto, CA)
1-25Pain and fear of cancer recurrence in long-term survivors of childhood cancerM. Patton, M. Noel, M. Khu, B. Russell, A. Neville, K. Reynolds, F. Schulte (Calgary, CA)
1-26Neurophysiological and behavioural measures of pain during neonatal hip examinationM. Pettersson, E. Olsson, A. Ohlin, M. Eriksson (Örebro, SE)
1-27A survey to evaluate the impact of co-morbidity presenting with pain in children managed by a specialist paediatric chronic pain service in the UKD. Rajapakse, G. Williams, S. Lilley, R. Howard (London, UK)
1-28Profiling coping among youth with chronic pain: a person-centered methodologyP. Richardson, A. Rajagopalan, L. Harrison, S. Huestis, E. Billman, R. Bhandari (Palo Alto, US)
1-30Early exposure to procedural pain is associated with development of thalamo-insula connectivity in very preterm neonatesJ. Schneider, E.G. Duerden, P. Hagmann, A.C. Truttmann, S.P. Miller (Lausanne, CH; London, Toronto, CA)
1-31The global biomechanical and morphological assessment: understanding pain in adolescent idiopathic scoliosisM. St-Georges, A. Teles, J.A. Ouellet, C.E. Ferland (Montreal, CA)
1-32103 children with Cyclical vomiting syndrome: description and follow up. A monocentric studyB. Tourniaire, S. Doukhan, M. Galinski (Bordeaux, Paris, FR)
1-33Remembering past pain and expecting future pain: a preliminary analysis on the role of child attention to pain and parental (non-) pain attentive behaviourA. Wauters, M. Noel, D. Van Ryckeghem, T. Vervoort (Ghent, BE; Calgary, CA)
1-34An examination of the reciprocal and concurrent relationships between behavioural and cardiac indicators of pain during 12- and 18-month vaccinationsJ. Waxman, M. DiLorenzo, R. Pillai Riddell, H. Garfield (Toronto, CA)
1-35Relationship between pain and risk factors for posttraumatic stress disorder in children and parents after accidental injuryM. Agoston, A. Bhatia, K. Hill (Atlanta, US)
50
AUTHOR ATTENDED POSTER SESSION 1, MONDAY, 17 JUNE 2019
1-36A systematic review of clinical practice guidelines for acute procedural pain on neonatesC. Balice, M. Zumstein-Shaha, C.J. Newman, G.D. Simonetti (Bellinzona, Bern, Lausanne, CH)
1-37Survey of nurses and doctors about pain management in neonatesC. Balice, C.J. Newman, G.D. Simonetti, M. Zumstein-Shaha (Bellinzona, Bern, Lausanne, CH)
1-38Intergenerational transmission of risk: parent chronic pain, trauma symptoms, and pain catastrophizing predict poorer outcomes for youth with chronic painJ. Beveridge, R. Mychasiuk, M. Noel (Calgary, CA; Melbourne, AU)
1-39Child and parent predictors of healthcare utilization amongst children and adolescents with chronic painK.A. Birnie, N. Rasic, M. Noel (Calgary, CA)
1-40Psychological distress in childhood increases the risk of back pain in adolescence. A prospective cohort studyA. Borges Dario, S. Kamper, C. Williams, L. Straker, P. O’Sullivan, R. Schütze, G. Kendal, A. Smith (Newcastle, Perth, Sydney, AU)
1-41Is multi-site pain an indicator of pain severity?D. Brown, A. Kupitz, N. Rosenthal, J. Wager (Datteln, DE)
1-42Effectiveness and implementation of a multifaceted online knowledge translation intervention for reducing pain in hospitalized infants: protocol for a hybrid type 1 implementation studyM. Bueno, S. Riahi, S.-A. Li, A. Lanese, M. Barwick, B. Stevens (Toronto, CA)
1-43Sleep and pain-related fear in youth with chronic headache: a 6-month prospective study of functional outcomesM.A. Clementi, C. Yu-Hsing Chang, R. Gambhir, A. Lebel, D.E. Logan (Boston, US)
1-44Post-implementation assessment of the Withdrawal Evaluation of Analgesia in Neonates (WEAN) protocolL. Franck, S. Stoffella, K. Baggett, R. Bisgaard, S. Scarpace Lucas, Y. Sun (San Francisco, US)
1-45Functional disability and psychological burden among adolescents with sickle cell disease: The role of pain acceptance and mindfulnessJ. Gise, L. Wright, L. Cohen, S. Sil (Atlanta, Boston, US)
1-46Capturing pain: the use of photovoice in youth with complex regional pain syndromeA. Griffin, A. Feinstein, A. Dunn (Menlo Park, Palo Alto, US)
1-47Cueing medication availability: operant influences on patient-controlled analgesia pump usage in children and adolescentsK. Hainsworth, M. Czarnecki, P. Simpson, L. Zhang, K. Wentz, W.H. Davies, D. Mueller, S. Weisman (Kent, Milwaukee, US)
51
AUTHOR ATTENDED POSTER SESSION 1, MONDAY, 17 JUNE 2019
1-48Retrospective comparison of two multimodal approaches to manage pediatric postoperative pain after pectus excavatum repairE. Hoeman, J. Fanelli, R. Manworren, J. Hajduk, R. Marcelino (Chicago, US)
1-49Arthritis invaders: randomized controlled trial of an internet-based psycho-educational game for children with juvenile idiopathic arthritisA. Hundert, B. Feldman, C. Duffy, A. Huber, L. Tucker, P. McGrath, S. Tse, L. Spiegel, J. Barsalou, C. Victor, M. Connelly, S. Campillo, S. Luca, J. Stinson (Halifax, Montreal, Ottawa, Toronto, Vancouver, CA; Kansas City, US)
1-50Post-surgical pain and analgesia in neonates – an Australian experienceE. Ilhan, V. Pacey, L. Brown, K. Spence, C. Galea, R. Halliday, J. Hush (Sydney, AU)
1-51A qualitative analysis of parents’ knowledge needs related to child cancer pain and its managementJ.N. Stinson, L.A. Jibb, P.R. Tutelman, C.T. Chambers, J.A. Parker, K. Irwin, H. Witteman, M. Barwick, C.V. Fernandez, F. Campbell, E.K. Drake, P.C. Nathan (Halifax, Montreal, Ottawa, Toronto, CA)
1-52The story of my future: using story completion in adolescents with complex regional pain syndromeA. Jones, L. Caes, A. Jordan (Bath, Stirling, UK)
1-53Building strength: individual, family, peer and school resilience factors in children and adolescents with chronic headacheK. Kaczynski, C. Chang (Boston, US)
1-54Meeting the needs of sick children, and the requirements of the UNCRC as law in SwedenK. Karlsson, L. Darcy (Borås, SE)
1-55Headaches in paediatric emergency department: care pathway and medical managementL. Lacan, A. Leroux, F. Dubos, J.-C. Cuvellier (Lille, FR)
1-56Perceived pain controllability, consequences and pain coherence are associated with levels of reported pain in children and young people with Juvenile Idiopathic ArthritisR.R. Lee, C.G. Muckian, S. Damaraju, D. Ghio, W. Thomson, L. Cordingley (Manchester, UK)
1-57Acupuncture may help to reduce pain anxiety and fatigue in pediatric pain patientsA.T. Lewis, W.L. Webb, P. Richardson, D. Parker, B. Golianu (Stanford, US)
1-58Enthesitis predicts persisting pain in children with Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis: a case-control comparison from the ReACCh-Out cohortT. McGrath, J. Guzman, N. Shiff, S. Tupper, L. Tucker, D. Rumsey (Edmonton, Saskatoon, Vancouver, CA; Gainesville, US)
1-59Morphine oromucosal solution for treatment of painful oral mucositisB. Nielsen, S. Friis, S. Henneberg, K. Schmigelow, J. Rømsing (Copenhagen, DK)
52
AUTHOR ATTENDED POSTER SESSION 1, MONDAY, 17 JUNE 2019
1-60Parent outcomes and parent perception of youth outcomes following intensive paediatric chronic pain rehabilitation at the Alberta Children’s HospitalN. Rasic, L. Rayner, J. Vinall, A. McPeak, M. Noel (Calgary, CA)
1-61Changes in parent protective responses influence changes in child functioning and pain acceptance over the course of intensive pain rehabilitationN. Rasic, A. McPeak, J. Vinall, L. Rayner, M. Noel (Calgary, CA)
1-62Evaluation of pupillometry for CYP2D6 phenotyping in children treated with tramadolF. Rodieux, F. Storelli, S. Manzano, C. Samer, K. Posfay-Barbe, A. Gervaix, Y. Daali, J. Desmeules (Geneva, CH)
1-63International trends of chronic back pain in adolescentsR. Roy, S. Galán, E. Sánchez-Rodríguez, M. Racine, E. Solé, M.P. Jensen, J. Miró (Malaga, Tarragona, ES; London, CA; Seattle, US)
1-64Pain acceptance mediates changes in pain interference among youth with chronic pain participating in an outpatient interdisciplinary programK. Salamon, R. Aggarwal Dutta, A. Hildenbrand (Wilmington, US)
1-65Adolescents’ and young adults’ attitudes toward coping strategies for menstrual painL. Seidman, K. Allyn, S. Evans, A. Rapkin, L. Payne (Bronx, Los Angeles, US; Geelong, AU)
1-66The effect of an educational intervention for strengthening pain management in children after surgery – a cluster randomized controlled trial using different methodological approachesA. Smeland, A. Twycross, S. Lundeberg, H. Reinertsen, T. Rustøen (Oslo, NO; London, UK; Stockholm, SE)
1-67Battlefield acupuncture instead of opioids for abscess drainage in the pediatric emergency departmentS.-L. Tsai, C. Lin (New Jersey, New York, US)
1-68Gender dysphoria and chronic pain in youth: a case seriesM. Sayeem, B. Carter, W.T. Zempsky (Farmington, Hartford, US)
1-69Impact of pain education: reduce the pain of vaccination in resource poor settingM.D. Joshi (Kailali, NP)
1-70Improvements in procedural pain management in a Canadian pediatric teaching hospital: the TOUT DOUX programJ. Paquette, G. Harbec, N. Fillion, M.-J. Doré-Bergeron, S. Charette (Montreal, CA)
1-71Pain Neuroscience Education for children with functional abdominal pain related disorders: a randomised controlled pilot studyR. Pas, S. Van Oosterwijck, M. Meeus, L. Leysen, E. Rheel, A. Roete, J. Nijs, K. Ickmans (Antwerp, Brussel, Ghent, Wilrijk, BE)
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AUTHOR ATTENDED POSTER SESSION 1, MONDAY, 17 JUNE 2019
1-72ChildKind International: a decade of progressN. Schechter, A. Finley, B. Stevens, K. Kivolowitz, L. Linsalata (Boston, US; Halifax, Toronto, CA)
1-73Evaluation of an Educational Workshop on Acupuncture for ChildrenS.-L. Tsai, D.W. Shin, E. Reynoso (New York, US)
1-74Paediatric Project ECHO (R) for pain: assessing the educational needs of Ontario healthcare providers related to management of paediatric painJ. Tyrrell, C. Lalloo, A. Jiwan, F. Campbell, G. Mesaroli, A. McKillop, E. McCarthy, J. Stinson (Toronto, CA)
1-75Opioids in children: advocating for good analgesia and decreasing risk of non-medical useR. Agarwal (Stanford, US)
1-76‘The OuchLess Project’ – improving the management of intravenous cannulation-related pain in childrenT. Nair, J.K.B. Lim, Z.X. Khoo, L.H. Cher, I. Chan, J. Ho, A. Lim, Y.N. Siow, A.S.H. Yeo (Singapore, SG)
1-77Towards ChildKind International: structures and processes resulting from pursuit of certification at University of Chicago Medicine Comer Children’s HospitalJ. Ott, R. Peddinti, M. Gonzalez, S. Hoehn, C. LaFond (Chicago, US)
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AUTHOR ATTENDED POSTER SESSION 2, TUESDAY, 18 JUNE 2019
2-78Pratice survey on postfracture analgesia in a french pediatric emergency departmentM. Liber, J. Avez-Couturier, C. De Jorna (Lille, FR)
2-79Functional magnetic resonance imaging reveals dependency between spontaneous brain activity and noxious stimulus response at the level of the individual infantL. Baxter, F. Moultrie, S. Fitzgibbon, S. Jbabdi, E. Duff, R. Slater (Oxford, UK)
2-80Preliminary findings between parent physiological activity, and parent reassurance and nonprocedure-related talk during children’s acute painK. Constantin, R. Moline, C.M. McMurtry (Guelph, Hamilton, London, CA)
2-81Using a brief screening tool to examine associations among parent factors and child functioning in youth with chronic painL. Harrison, A. Holley, A. Wilson, L. Simons (Palo Alto, Portland, US)
2-82Dialectical behavior therapy (DBT) for pediatric chronic painR. Holloway, A. Hermé, A. Rosales, A. Yetwin (Los Angeles, US)
2-83Descriptive prospective study in children and adolescents consulting for headaches in paediatric emergencies at the CHRU of Lille for one yearA. Leroux, L. Lacan (Lille, FR)
2-84Central pain modulation in children with functional abdominal pain related disordersR. Pas, S. Van Oosterwijck, M. Meeus, L. Leysen, E. Rheel, E. Van De Vijver, J. Nijs, K. Ickmans (Antwerp, Brussel, Ghent, Wilrijk, BE)
2-85The role of microglia in the postnatal maturation of spinal somatosensory circuitry during normal development and after early postnatal injuryY. Xu, D. Moulding, S. Beggs (London, UK)
2-86Vincristine-induced pain: an inflammatory neuropathyH. Starobova, A. Muelller, M. Monteleone, K. Schroder, I. Vetter (St. Lucia, AU)
2-87Improving the treatment of children’s presenting and procedural pain during emergency department visits: a province-wide quality improvement collaborative in CanadaJ. Thull-Freedman, A. Stang, E. Pols, A. McFetridge, S. Libbey, K. Lonergan (Calgary, CA)
2-88Does the number of repetitive painful procedures during early life affect acute and long-term sensory outcome? Evidence from a translational modelN.J. van den Hoogen, A.R. de Kort, J. Patijn, D. Tibboel, E.A. Joosten (Maastricht, Rotterdam, NL)
2-89Pain and pain management at home after tonsil surgeryF. Alm, E. Ericsson, S. Lundeberg (Stockholm, Örebro, SE)
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AUTHOR ATTENDED POSTER SESSION 2, TUESDAY, 18 JUNE 2019
2-90Associations between insensitive parent behaviours and infant pain-related distress: is infant temperament a moderator?S. Badovinac, H. Gennis, R. Pillai Riddell, H. Garfield, S. Greenberg (Toronto, CA)
2-91Self-report sleep measures are better predictors of pain disability and coping than actigraphy measures in an inpatient rehabilitation program for children with chronic painI. Boggero, C. King, V. Schneider II, K. Byars, S. Williams (Cincinnati, US)
2-92Opioid prescribing for children at a non-paediatric hospitalT. Burns, M. Essiet, M. Parris, J. Rinehart, R. Dayal (Orange, Seattle, US)
2-93The relationship between child pain-related injustice appraisals and pain-related outcomes: the mediating role of child angerF. Daenen, F. Baert, T. Vervoort (Ghent, BE)
2-94Relations between age and pain catastrophizing on outcomes in youth with Complex Regional Pain SyndromeG. D’souza, P. Richardson, A. Griffin, A. Rajagopalan, A. Feinstein (Stanford, US)
2-95Pain at home following adenotonsillectomy & use of an electronic pain diaryK. Brown, A. Bérard-Giasson, S. Balram, S. Daniel, A. Otis, W. Supaopaspan, C. Frigon (Montreal, CA)
2-96Triage of at-risk headache patients using the pediatric pain screening toolM.L. Gremillion, K.J. Anderson-Khan, M. Pelky, S.J. Weisman, K.R. Hainsworth (Milwaukee, US)
2-97Cognitive functioning in pediatric pain patients – a retrospective analysisS. Grothus, B. Zepp, J. Wager, B. Zernikow (Datteln, DE)
2-98Trajectory of change in intensive interdisciplinary pain treatment using multi-level modelingS. Williams, K. Homan, S. Crowley (Cincinnati, Logan, US)
2-99Prevalence of pain in children in an academic medical centerN. Pierce, C. Miles, J. Ott, A. Carter, C. LaFond (Chicago, Iowa City, US)
2-100Pain severity of common neonatal procedures: a review of neonatal pain scores and clinician rankingsM.P. Laudiano-Dray, R. Iyer, R. Pillai Riddell, K. Whitehead, C. Rumeo, S. Costa, L. Jones, M. Fitzgerald, L. Fabrizi, J. Meek (London, UK; Toronto, CA)
2-101Translation and cultural validation of the adolescent pediatric pain tool (APPT)D. Madi (Beirut, LB)
2-102Population pharmacokinetics of intraperitoneal bupivacaine in young children and postoperative morphine requirementsP. Meier, L. Pereira, D. Zurakowski, C. Houck (Boston, US)
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AUTHOR ATTENDED POSTER SESSION 2, TUESDAY, 18 JUNE 2019
2-103Somatosensory testing for indicators of central sensitisation in children and adolescents with chronic painD. Champion, P. Perera, A. Kersch, M. Mercado, S. Sarraf, T. Jaaniste (Sydney, AU)
2-104Impact of multidisciplinary pain management in hospitalized burned childrenM. Pizarro, E. Bitancur (El Pinar, Montevideo, UY)
2-105Chronic postsurgical pain in children: a prospective observational study to examine the transition from acute to chronic pain after major surgeryB. Rosenbloom, G. Page, L. Isaac, F. Campbell, J. Stinson, J. Katz (Montreal, Toronto, CA)
2-106The first two weeks at home after scoliosis surgery – adolescents’ diaries, a qualitative studyA.-C. Rullander (Umeå, SE)
2-107Prevalence of posttraumatic stress disorder in children and adolescents with chronic painL. Stahlschmidt, F. Flack, M. Dobe, J. Wager (Datteln, DE)
2-108Comparing physical and psychosocial symptoms at home in children and adolescents with and without cancer pain, fatigue, and nauseaV. Torres, L.C. Nascimento, A. Fernandes, M.D. Nunes-Rodrigues, E. Jacob (Los Angeles, US; Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo, BR; Coimbra, PT)
2-109Who are we treating, parent or child? Comparison between parent and child reporting of perceived daily function in context of paediatric chronic pain, using PedsQLTME. Wallace, L. Caes (Glasgow, Stirling, UK)
2-110Depression mediates the relationship between insomnia and paediatric chronic pain over timeT. Wihak, A. McPeak, R. Mychasiuk, M. Noel (Calgary, CA; Melbourne, AU)
2-111Parental experiences of injustice in the context of pediatric chronic pain: an interpretative phenomenological analysisF. Baert, J. McParland, M. Miller, A. Hirsh, Z. Trost, T. Vervoort (Ghent, BE; Glasgow, UK; Birmingham, Indianapolis, US)
2-112Patient and family experience of an intensive interdisciplinary treatment program for pediatric persistent painA. Baerveldt, S. Scratch, L. Colucci (Toronto, CA)
2-113Parents’ views on pain management of the hospitalized neonateC. Balice, G.D. Simonetti, M. Zumstein-Shaha, C.J. Newman (Bellinzona, Bern, Lausanne, CH)
2-114Utilization of ketamine for inpatient pediatric sickle cell disease inpatients admitted at tertiary care facilitiesC. Stake, S. Minhas, F. Hebal, N. Seewald, K. Barsness, P. Birmingham (Chicago, US)
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AUTHOR ATTENDED POSTER SESSION 2, TUESDAY, 18 JUNE 2019
2-115A virtual reality biofeedback computer game for pediatric pain relief: a randomized controlled trialM. Bishop, L. Cohen (Atlanta, US)
2-116Epidural analgesia for better pain control after surgery in childrenC. Borges, R. Coelho, C. Abadesso, M. Moniz, C. Escobar, P. Nunes, H. Almeida (Amadora, Lisboa, Beja, PT)
2-117Procedural pain management in Neonatal Intensive Care Units: towards a model of predictive factorsD. Cruz, A. Fernandes, C. Oliveira (Coimbra, Evora, PT)
2-118Socio-medical aftercare (AC) for severely impaired pediatric chronic pain patients: Design of a multicenter randomized controlled trial (RCT)M. Dogan, J. Wager, B. Zernikow (Datteln, DE)
2-119Pain management in paediatric oncology: an audit of adjuvant use and its impact on opioid sparing and pain controlT. Fabila, A. Yeo Siok Hoong, S. Lim Siu Tin (Singapore, SG)
2-120Advancing understanding of older adolescents and young adults with chronic painA. Feinstein, D. Parker, R. Bhandari, S. Huestis, P. Richardson, A. Rajagopalan, A. Burch, A. Griffin (Los Angeles, Menlo Park, US)
2-121Readiness to change and program outcome in a pediatric pain clinicA. Hahn, J. Hoehn, M. Abdel-Rasoul, T. Smith, S. Wrona, K. Lemanek (Columbus, US)
2-122A chart audit and patient survey on pain management at a pediatric hospital in Ontario, CanadaJ. Wilding, D. Harrison, B. Martelli, Z. Geddes, C. Lavin-Venegas, D. Long, G. Macartney, M. Macneil, D. Mervitz, J. Reszel, V. Suwalska, C. Theoret-Douglas, N. Ullyot (Ottawa, CA)
2-123Treatment outcomes within a multidisciplinary pediatric pain clinic: the value of PROMISJ. Hoehn, A. Hahn, M. Abdel-Rasoul, S. Wrona, L. Chun, K. Lemanek (Columbus, US)
2-124iCanCope with PostOp Pain: development of a smartphone-based pain self-management app for adolescents following surgeryA. Hundert, K. Birnie, C. Lalloo, J. Cafazzo, J. Chorney, T. Do Amaral, T. Gerstle, S. Lloyd, C. Matava, E. Mauti, G. Petroz, D. Ruskin, C. Victor, F. Campbell, J. Stinson (Halifax, Toronto, CA)
2-125Lidocaine infusion for the treatment of chronic pain in childrenL. Isaac, C. Pehora, J. Tyrrell, M. Crawford (Toronto, CA)
2-126Skin-to-skin care reduces nociceptive brain activity in human newbornsL. Jones, M.P. Laudiano-Dray, R. Iyer, K. Whitehead, J. Meek, M. Fitzgerald, L. Fabrizi, R. Pillai Riddell (London, UK; Toronto, CA)
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AUTHOR ATTENDED POSTER SESSION 2, TUESDAY, 18 JUNE 2019
2-127Child and parent experiences in an interdisciplinary pain clinic intake: changes in pain related cognitions and beliefs about treatment effectivenessA.N. Junghans-Rutelonis, A. Postier, R. Jongbloedt, A.K. Kolste, K. Desai Dakoji, P. Bragg, S.J. Friedrichsdorf (Minneapolis, US)
2-128Children’s strategies for dealing with fear and pain experienced during hospital careI. Kleye, L. Hedén, K. Karlsson, A. Sundler, L. Darcy (Borås, SE)
2-129Medication and health care utilization in school children with recurrent headacheA. Kupitz, N. Rosenthal, D. Brown, J. Wager (Datteln, DE)
2-130Painful procedures in critically ill children in the US: what are we doing and to whom?C. LaFond, K. Hanrahan, N. Pierce, A.M. McCarthy (Chicago, Iowa City, US)
2-131Acute postoperative opioid consumption trajectories and long-term outcomes in paediatric patients after spine surgeryM. Li, D.D. Ocay, A.R. Teles, P.M. Ingelmo, J.A. Ouellet, G. Pagé, C.E. Ferland (Montreal, CA)
2-132From one pain to many: identifying risk factors for development of overlapping pain conditions in pediatricsD. Logan, T. Turrisi, C. Donado, L. Wright, N. Schechter (Boston, US)
2-133The successful use of low-dose methadone as an adjunct when treating complex pain in childrenE. Malmros Olsson, S. Lundeberg (Stockholm, SE)
2-134Liver biopsies – pain management outside the operating room in infantsP. Mittermaier, A.-C. Pettersson, B. Fischler (Stockholm, SE)
2-135The feasibility of a weekly pediatric pain rehabilitation programS. Naidu, D. Parker, A. Feinstein, A. Bortz, A. Griffin (Menlo Park, US)
2-136Effects on self-reported sleep when adolescents with recurrent pain participate in the Help Overcoming Pain Early (HOPE) interventionS. Nilsson, U. Wallbing, G. Alfvén, A. Fors (Gothenburg, Stockholm, SE)
2-137Feasibility and program evaluation of an online peri-operative cognitive-behavioral therapy intervention for adolescents having major surgeryJ. Rabbitts, T. Palermo, A. Bartlett, M. Meyyappan, R. Aaron, C. Murray (Baltimore, Seattle, US)
2-138Does media use increase the risk for headaches? Results of a cross-sectional study in school childrenN. Rosenthal, A. Kupitz, D. Brown, J. Wager (Datteln, DE)
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AUTHOR ATTENDED POSTER SESSION 2, TUESDAY, 18 JUNE 2019
2-139The in-betweens: multimodal inpatient pain treatment in an uncertain and unstable stage of lifeS. Schenk, S. Grothus, J. Wager, B. Zernikow (Datteln, DE)
2-140Inpatient ketamine utilization for pediatric admitted with a pain diagnosisN. Seewald, P. Birmingham, R. Manworren, F. Hebal, K. Barsness, D. Krodel (Chicago, US)
2-141Analgesia for arterial puncture/cannulation in neonates: a systematic reviewV. Shah, R. Pillai Riddell, E. Ng, E. Lang, D. Harrison, T. Lacaze-Masmonteil, A. Taddio (Calgary, Ottawa, Toronto, CA)
2-142Inpatient utilization of meperidine in US pediatric tertiary care hospitalsC. Stake, P. Birmingham, D. Krodel, F. Hebal, R. Manworren (Chicago, US)
2-143Pain during wound or burn dressings in 95 ambulatory children: an observationnal prospective monocentric studyB. Tourniaire, M. Prieto, C. Bouchart, M. Paugam, P. Cimerman (Paris, FR)
2-144Identifying which children with chronic pain may need a daily intensive pain rehabilitation programA. Hahn, S. Wrona, M. Abdel-Rasoul, J. Hoehn, T. Smith, K. Lemanek (Columbus, US)
2-145Challenges in treating young children with headaches related to intracranial pressure changesR. Agarwal (Stanford, US)
2-146Becoming a paediatric pain physician: the journey began in a short coatT. Burns (Seattle, US)
2-147The saga of the retained epidural catheter: a case reportK. O’Hear, G. D’souza (Stanford, US)
2-148Bioethical approaches to pediatric painM.A. Flores (Mexico, MX)
2-149Educational needs of nursing students on pediatric pain management in Ghana: a descriptive cross-sectional studyA. Kusi Amponsah, V. Bam, J. Kyei-Dompim, E. Oduro, C.K. Ahoto, A. Axelin (Turku, FI; Kumasi, GH)
2-150Adult ratings of pediatric pain: the roles of anxiety and nursing trainingC. Shneider, A. Robbertz, M. Donati, L. Cohen (Atlanta, US)
2-151Pain of intramuscular injection of vitamin a in premature babiesV. Alix, D. De Luca, E. Fournier Charriere (Clamart, Paris, FR)
2-152Guideline development for the paediatric non-pharmacological procedural pain management in SwitzerlandR. Kugler, S. Herzog, J. Wieland, B. Wenger Lanz, N. Fabian, S. Gianora, A. Julen, F. Ullmann, K. Marfurt-Russenberger (Aarau, Baden, Basel, Bern, St. Gallen, Visp, Winterthur, Zurich, CH)
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AUTHOR ATTENDED POSTER SESSION 2, TUESDAY, 18 JUNE 2019
2-153Evaluating a parent-directed knowledge translation resource for improving vaccination pain management in childrenN.E. MacKenzie, C.T. Chambers, M. Barwick, K.A. Birnie, K.E. Boerner, V. Granikov, N. MacDonald, C.M. McMurtry, J.A. Parker, P. Pluye, A. Taddio, P.R. Tutelman (Guelph, Halifax, Montreal, Toronto, Vancouver, CA)
2-154A survey on the influence of cultural beliefs on Asian healthcare workers’ perceptions of pain: a pilot studyS.H. Ng, M.M.Y. Yeong, J.F. Especkerman, N. Jayakrishnan, A.S.H. Yeo (Singapore, SG)
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AUTHOR ATTENDED POSTER SESSION 3, WEDNESDAY, 19 JUNE 2019
3-155Impact of toddler sex on the relationship between caregiver and toddler co-regulation during vaccinations in the second year of lifeO. Bucsea, M. DiLorenzo, J. Waxman, R. Pillai Riddell (Toronto, CA)
3-156Children’s previous pain experience relates to parent physiological, not self-reported, responses to their child’s completion of the cold pressor taskK. Constantin, R. Moline, C.M. McMurtry (Guelph, Hamilton, London, CA)
3-157Pain management after discharge from pediatric emergenciesB. Hallopé, E. D’Ollone, O. Bourdon, L. Titomanlio, S. Pontone, L. Morin, S. Dugue (Paris, FR)
3-158Neural mechanisms underlying fear conditioning in youth with chronic pain: examination of subcortical brain structureM. Heirich, I. Timmers, N. Löcher, L. Heathcote, T. Duarte Silva Bans, C. Soares, D. Borsook, L. Simons (Palo Alto, Waltham, US)
3-159Obsessive-compulsive traits in youth with chronic painR. Holloway, A. Hermé, A. Rosales, A. Yetwin (Los Angeles, US)
3-160Pain in Lebanese children with cancerD. Madi (Beirut, LB)
3-161Attentional biases in pediatric chronic pain: preliminary evidence from a longitudinal eye tracking study on pain and mental health in youthS. Soltani, C. Sears, T. Vervoort, D. Van Ryckeghem, M. Noel (Calgary, CA)
3-162Quantitative sensory testing influences treatment in paediatric chronic pain interdisciplinary clinicA. Bruneau, M. Somaini, N. Mohamed, P.M. Ingelmo, C.E. Ferland (Montreal, CA)
3-163Do cerebral representations of heat pain change from early adolescence to adulthood?M.-E. Hoeppli, H. Nahman-Averbuch, C.D. King, K.R. Goldschneider, R.C. Coghill (Cincinnati, US)
3-164Moderate to severe pain days in hospitalized childrenC. LaFond, S. Devanagondi, N. Pierce (Chicago, US)
3-165IDEA (Impact Douleur Enfant Adolescent): quantitative and qualitative description of children and adolescents referred to 14 French outpatient pediatric pain clinicsJ. Avez-Couturier, R. Amouroux (Lille, FR; Lausanne, CH)
3-166Pain experience, physical function, pain coping, and catastrophizing in children with sickle cell disease who had normal and altered sensory patternsI. Baldwin, A. Fernandes, M. Nunes-Rodrigues, L.C. Nascimento, E. Jacob (Los Angeles, Philadelphia, US; Coimbra, PT; Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo, BR)
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AUTHOR ATTENDED POSTER SESSION 3, WEDNESDAY, 19 JUNE 2019
3-167Growing pains and restless legs syndrome: aetiological implications of improved phenotypic definitionsD. Champion, S. Sarraf, T. Donnelly, M. Bui, A. Bott, S. Goh, T. Jaaniste, J. Hopper (Melbourne, Randwick, Sydney, AU)
3-168Evaluation of therapeutic bath pain management practices in burned childrenP. Cimerman, F. Maillard, B. Tourniaire, E. Conti (Paris, FR)
3-169Noxious-evoked responses in neonates after experimental stimulation of the hand, foot and thighM. Cobo, C. Hartley, S. Goksan, A. Hoskin, R. Slater (Oxford, UK)
3-170Diagnosing complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS) in children: evaluation of the Budapest CriteriaY. Friedrich, D. Zurakowski, C. Sieberg, D. Logan, N. Sethna (Boston, US)
3-171Pain management policies and practices across Portuguese pediatric emergency departmentsC. Abadesso, A. Garrido, A.R. Manuel, H. Almeida (Lisboa, PT)
3-172Efficacy and safety of 2-chloroprocaine infusions via paravertebral catheters for postoperative analgesia in infants undergoing major thoracic or abdominal surgeriesC. Greco, K. Boretsky (Boston, US)
3-173Measurement and modulation of noxious-evoked brain activity following immunisationD. Gursul, C. Hartley, A. Hoskin, G. Green, G. Schmidt Mellado, R. Slater (Oxford, UK)
3-174Do children’s self-reports differ from the proxy reports of fear levels during needle procedures in children with cancer?L. Hedén, G. Ljungman (Borås, Uppsala, SE)
3-175Associating circulating inflammatory cytokines with perioperative pain in adolescents undergoing spinal fusion surgery: an exploratory studyJ.J. Liao, L. Nikolajev, S. Premachandran, S. Bote, A.R. Teles, J.A. Ouellet, C.E. Ferland (Montreal, CA)
3-176Pain in a pediatric emergency departmentC. Abadesso, A.R. Manuel, A. Garrido, I. Mascarenhas, H. Almeida (Lisboa, PT)
3-177Characterization of persistent pain in adolescents with sickle cell diseaseS. Martin, L. Cohen, A. Griffin, S. Sil, L. Payne, L. Zeltzer (Atlanta, Los Angeles, Menlo Park, US)
3-178Virtual reality analgesia during burn wound debridement of children with large severe burns who do have vs. who do not have Acute Stress Disorder symptomsH. Hoffman, R. Rodriguez, R. Pena, J. Gomez, L. Rosenberg, M. Rosenberg, A. Amin, D. Patterson, W. Meyer (Galveston, Houston, Seatle, US)
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AUTHOR ATTENDED POSTER SESSION 3, WEDNESDAY, 19 JUNE 2019
3-179Can parent and infant behaviours during vaccination tell us about preschool attachment status?M. O’Neill, R. Pillai Riddell, H. Garfield, S. Greenberg (Toronto, CA)
3-180The impact of parental protective behavior upon child pain behavior in the context of cancer-related painful procedures: the moderating role of parental self-oriented distressE. Rheel, K. Ickmans, L. Caes, T. Vervoort (Brussel, Ghent, Jette, BE; Stirling, UK)
3-181It hurts but I’m fine! How self-determination theory helps in understanding resources mechanisms in adolescents with chronic painA. Riggenbach, R. Amouroux (Lausanne, CH)
3-182Gestational age in the validation of the Bernese Pain Scale for NeonatesK. Schenk, L. Stoffel, R. Bürgin, B. Stevens, D. Bassler, S. Schulzke, M. Nelle, E. Cignacco (Basel, Bern, Zurich, CH; Toronto, CA)
3-183Children’s fear and pain during needle-injection. Preliminary results from a qualitative observational study of children 5-15years, parents and nurses during a training session for home-administrationK. Sørensen, H. Skirbekk, G. Kvarstein, H. Wøien (Oslo, Tromsø, NO)
3-184Le Trouillomètre – The Scary Scale: a self-report fear scale validated for children aged 6 to 12 years oldS. Thurillet, C. Wood, C. Bahans, S. Bougnard, A. Labrunie, V. Messager, P. Beloni, L. Fourcade (Limoges, FR)
3-185Munchausen by proxy in 50 children with chronic painB. Tourniaire, F. Reiter, D. Annequin (Paris, FR)
3-186Toward understanding children’s experience of having a parent with chronic pain: a focus group studyT. Vervoort, F. Baert, T. Lammens, L. Ben Brahim, C. Demortier (Ghent, BE)
3-187Feasibility of a novel test battery for a paediatric interdisciplinary pain program including accelerometry, quantitative sensory testing and sensitivity to physical activityE. Woods, J. Kingsley, S. Taylor, A. Hilyard (Perth, AU)
3-188Adolescent risk and resilience profiles and their associations with treatment compliance in pediatric chronic pain: a person-centered analysisR. Aggarwal Dutta, K. Salamon (Wilmington, US)
3-189Using the Canadian Occupational Performance Measure to understand adolescents’ priorities in intensive interdisciplinary rehabilitation treatment for persistent painA. Baerveldt, L. Franks (Toronto, CA)
3-190Development of an intervention to improve the management of painful procedures in neonatesC. Balice, G.D. Simonetti, C.J. Newman, M. Zumstein-Shaha (Bellinzona, Bern, Lausanne, CH)
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AUTHOR ATTENDED POSTER SESSION 3, WEDNESDAY, 19 JUNE 2019
3-191External cold and vibration for pain management of children undergoing needle-related procedures in the emergency department: a randomized controlled non-inferiority trialS. Le May, A. Ballard, C. Khadra, S. Adler, E. Parent, E. D. Trottier, B. Bailey, N. Poonai, (Chicoutimi, London, Montreal, CA)
3-192Family history of pain is associated with musculoskeletal pain in children and adolescents: systematic review with meta-analysisA. Borges Dario, S. Kamper, M. O’Keeffe, J. Zadro, H. Lee, L. Wolfenden, C. Williams (Newcastle, Sydney, AU; Oxford, UK)
3-193Exploring the relationship between parent pain perceptions and treatment adherence in children with arthritisY. Brandelli, C. Chambers, P. Tutelman, J. Stinson, A. Huber, J. Wilson (Halifax, Toronto, Vancouver, CA)
3-194Inpatient treatment of pediatric complex regional pain syndrome at tertiary care facilities in the USJ. Fanelli, S. Minhas, F. Hebal, C. Stake, R. Shah (Chicago, US)
3-195At their fingertips: the effects of child-led distraction using a tablet computer on children’s distress and pain during painful medical procedures; a randomised controlled trialJ. Ferullo, G. Leslie, S. Wilson, N. Bear (Bentley, Nedlands, AU)
3-196How children and parents want to improve communication with health care providersA. Fjellman-Wiklund, C. Eriksson, T. Lind, V. Lundberg (Umeå, SE)
3-197Capturing pediatric headache at-risk populations for brief pain biofeedback/cognitive-behavioral treatmentK. Fleischman, I. Khazan (Boston, US)
3-198Saliva-extracted DNA is a noninvasive DNA sampling technique for examining epigenetic modifications in pediatric pain researchL.A. Hatfield, R.K. Hoffman, R.C. Polomano, Y.P. Conley (Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, US)
3-199The significant hospital and safety barriers encountered during placement of a novel tunneled intrathecal catheter for metastatic cancer painE. Holland, K. Gentry, B. Windsor (Greenville, Seattle, US)
3-200Dexmedetomidine reduces opioid requirements but prolongs length of stay after same day adenotonsillectomyC. Houck, J. Cravero (Boston, US)
3-201Resilience beyond risk: pain self-efficacy mediates the association between protective parenting behavior and functional outcomes in youth with chronic painS. Huestis, D. Parker, R. Bhandari (Menlo Park, US)
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AUTHOR ATTENDED POSTER SESSION 3, WEDNESDAY, 19 JUNE 2019
3-202Procedural pain management: patients’ report on efficacy of numbing device for venepunctures in the Asian outpatient paediatric settingN. Jayakrishnan, A.S. Hoong Yeo, G. Kaur, N. Bte Tenan (Singapore, SG)
3-203Chronic pediatric pain interference in activities of daily living: do we see eye to eye?A.N. Junghans-Rutelonis, J. Cha, J. Waters, K. Desai Dakoji, C. Daughtry, A. Postier, S.J. Friedrichsdorf (Minneapolis, US)
3-204Best treatment option(s) for patients with chronic primary musculoskeletal pain: protocol for a network meta-analytic approachH. Koechlin, A. Barke, B. Korwisi, C. Locher (Basel, CH; Boston, US; Marburg, DE; Plymouth, UK)
3-205Decreasing recurrent pain and anxiety in medical procedures with a paediatric population (DREAM): a pilot studyS. Le May, C. Khadra, D. Paquin, J.-S. Fortin, A. Ballard, I. Perreault, S. Bouchard, M. Noel, J. Déry, M. Hupin (Calgary, Gatineau, Granby, Montreal, Val D’Or, CA)
3-207How can children with juvenile arthritis be more involved in health care?V. Lundberg, M. Sandlund, C. Eriksson, R. Janols, T. Lind, A. Fjellman Wiklund (Umeå, SE)
3-208IV acetaminophen stewardship for children’s appendectomy pain managementR. Manworren, S. Mudahar, H. Quan, S. Park, L. Codaro, T. Moran (Chicago, US)
3-209The mediating role of anger in the relationship between pain-related injustice appraisals and pain outcomes in pediatric chronic painM.M. Miller, A.E. Williams, E.L. Scott, Z. Trost, A.T. Hirsh (Ann Arbor, Birmingham, Indianapolis, US)
3-210A ‘dyadic dance’: pain catastrophizing as a moderator of daily relationships between parent protective responses, mood and youth painA. Neville, Y. Griep, F. Schulte, K. Yeates, T. Palermo, M. Noel (Calgary, CA; Seattle, US)
3-211Managing low pressure headache in the paediatric populationJ. Noyes, S. Rastogi (Newcastle-upon-Tyne, UK)
3-212A multi-modal, peri-operative treatment guideline to decrease opioid use and length of stay on post operative pediatric spinal fusion patientsM. Reynolds, E. Grigg (Seattle, US)
3-213Should pyeloplasties have pumps? An audit of post-operative analgesic regimes of children undergoing pyeloplastyF. Richards, J. Peters, G. Williams (London, UK)
3-214Reduced perceived stress and improved parenting behaviours in parents of children with chronic pain following use of a mindfulness and psychosocial support mobile applicationL. Seidman, E. Donovan, M. Trant, S. Martin, L. Payne, T. Cousineau, L. Zeltzer (Boston, Los Angeles, US)
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AUTHOR ATTENDED POSTER SESSION 3, WEDNESDAY, 19 JUNE 2019
3-215Analgesia for percutaneous central venous catheter insertion in neonates: a systematic reviewV. Shah, R. Pillai Riddell, E. Ng, E. Lang, D. Harrision, T. Lacaze-Masmonteil, A. Taddio (Calgary, Ottawa, Toronto, CA)
3-216‘If I was hurting, I probably wouldn’t be thinking about mindfulness’ – a qualitative investigation of mindfulness in pediatric chronic painS. Shih, L. Cohen, J. Miller, V. Claudia (Atlanta, US)
3-217Does treating Vitamin D deficiency in children and adolescents with chronic pain improve their functioning?C. Soprano, A. Albahri, J. Romberger, D. Devinney, K. Salamon (Philadelphia, Wilmington, US)
3-218Preliminary support for improvements in parents’ responses to children’s chronic pain with a moderate level of parent intervention in an intensive interdisciplinary pain rehabilitation programM. Tsai Owens, K. Weiss, E. Law, Y.J. Ko, S. Yurs (Seattle, US)
3-219Live lullaby singing during painful procedures in preterm and term infantsA. Ullsten, U. Volgsten, M. Klässbo, M. Eriksson (Karlstad, Örebro, SE)
3-220A case series comparing the effectiveness of a bespoke interdisciplinary paediatric inpatient therapy programme in AsiaM.M.Y. Yeong, N. Jayakrishnan, J.F. Especkerman, S.H. Ng, A.S.H. Yeo (Singapore, SG)
3-221Users’ evaluation of an e-learning curriculum on neonatal pain assessment in Portuguese (Brazil): the Programa de Avaliação da Dor Neonatal (PAD-Neo)M. Bueno, T. Costa, F. Silva, E. Duarte, F. Lima, E. Dittz (Toronto, CA; Belo Horizonte, Sao Paulo, BR)
3-222Parental perceptions of how prepared they are for their child’s painful burns dressing changes: a Qualitative StudyJ. Butler, J. Kenardy, A. De Young, B. Dow, B. Griffin, R. Kimble (Brisbane, AU)
3-223Fitting the square peg into the round hole! A standardised approach to therapeutic intervention in children with complex pain, is it possible?T. Jones, S. Lord, E. Kepreotes, J. Dyer (Newcastle, AU)
3-224Adolescent pain science education: consensus on learning objectivesH.B. Leake, L.C. Heathcote, L.E. Simons, J.W. Pate, J.N. Stinson, G.L. Moseley (Adelaide, Sydney, AU; Palo Alto, US; Toronto, CA)
3-225Continuous fascia iliaca compartment block as an alternative in the treatment of a persistent hip pain: a case reportA.C. Lopes Pinheiro, F. Claro da Silva, P.P. Vanzillotta (Rio de Janeiro, BR)
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AUTHOR ATTENDED POSTER SESSION 3, WEDNESDAY, 19 JUNE 2019
3-226Integration of patient reported outcomes to assess postoperative pain: feedback from parentsS. Minhas, C. Stake, K. Billings, J. Hill, R. Manworren, K. Barsness (Chicago, US)
3-227A developmental cost analysis of pediatric chronic painA. Rajagopalan, P. Richardson, E. Billman, R. Bhandari (Palo Alto, US)
3-228Painful procedures predominate in memory of adult survivor of childhood cancerI. Nuchprayoon (Bangkok, TH)
3-229Pain prevalence in hospitalized children with cancer: a prospective cross-sectional surveyC. Ugaz Olivares, R. Morales Rivas, I. Ortiz Morales (Lima, PE)
3-230Ultrasound-guided Quadratus Lumborum Block versus caudal block for postoperative analgesia in children undergoing acute diseases of the abdominal cavityB. Zaletskyi, D. Dmytriiev (Vinnitsa, UA)
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NETWORKING OPPORTUNITIES
Welcome ReceptionSunday, 16 June 2019, 18:00 – 19:30
All participants and exhibitors are kindly invited to the Welcome Reception which will take place at the congress centre . After a first exciting day of science and education at the congress, it is time to enjoy a relaxed atmosphere to network with your colleagues and friends .
Costs are included in the registration fee. Please make sure to wear your badge.
Gala DinnerTuesday, 18 June 2019, 19:30 – 22:30
Let’s spend a great evening together at the “Elisabethenkirche” in Basel . The neo-Gothic church of St . Elisabeth is a generous space with slender columns, glass windows letting in natural light, and flexible seating in the heart of Basel . The building is leased out by the “Open Church of St Elisabeth”, an ecumenical association that funds social, cultural and spiritual events and services for Basel and the region through rental income, donations and cooperations .
Enjoy the special atmosphere in this historical building and spend a great evening with your colleagues and friends while having a delicious dinner .You will be entertained by the famous magician Alex Porter who takes his audience into a magical world, amazes with surprising tricks and enchants with fantastic, poetic tales .
Costs: CHF 120.– (including food and drinks, excl. 7.7% VAT)
Please take tram No . 2 (stop Messeplatz) from the Congress Center and leave the tram at the stop Bankverein . Follow the Elisabethenstrasse for about 150 meters .
Address: Offene Kirche Elisabethen, Elisabethenstr . 14, 4051 Basel
Copyright: Offene Kirche Elisabethen
69
GENERAL INFORMATION
Badges
Access to all scientific and networking events will only be possible with your personal badge, which is pre-printed and available to be picked up at the registration helpdesk onsite . All participants are requested to wear their name badge throughout the congress .If you forget your badge, we can reprint it for a deposit of CHF 30 .00 . The deposit will be returned once you show that you still have both badges, of which we will keep one . If you have lost your badge or do not show both badges, CHF 30 .00 will be charged .
Cloakroom
An unattended cloakroom is available in the congress centre next to the registration helpdesk during the registration opening hours .
CME Accreditation
Certificates will only be available online . You will receive an email after the congress with all instructions on how to download your certificate .
European Accreditation
The 12th International Symposium on Pediatric Pain (ISPP 2019), Basel, Switzerland, has been accredited by the European Accreditation Council for Medical Education (EACCME®) with 29 European CME credits (ECMEC®s) as follows:
6 credits for 16 June / 6 credits for 17 June / 6 credits for 18 June / 8 credits for 19 June / 3 credits for 20 June
National Accreditation
Föderation der Schweizer Psychologinnen und Psychologen (FSP)Federation of Swiss Psychologists (FSP)
8 per symposium day
Schweizerische Gesellschaft für Pharmazeutische Medizin / Swiss Society of Pharmaceutical Medicine
3 per symposium day
Schweizerische Gesellschaft für Anästhesiologie und Reanimation SGAR Swiss Society of Anaesthesiology and Resuscitation SSAR
8 per symposium day
Swiss Society for Interventional Pain Management SSIPM 14 for the symposium3 for the education day
Schweizerische Gesellschaft für Pädiatrie SGP Swiss Society of Paediatrics SSP
24 for the symposium8 for the education day
Schweizerische Gesellschaft für Neonatologie SGN Swiss Society of Neonatology
24 for the symposium8 for the education day
Schweizerische Gesellschaft zum Studium des Schmerzes SGSS Swiss Association for the Study of Pain
8 for the education day
Schweizerische Gesellschaft für Kinder- und Jugendpsychiatrie und -Psychotherapie (SGKJPP)
24 for the symposium 8 for the education day
70
GENERAL INFORMATION
Coffee Breaks
Morning and afternoon coffee breaks are included in the registration fee and will be served in the exhibition area . Please refer to the “Program Overview” for the times .
Evaluation
After the congress, you will receive an email with a request to fill in an online survey . Please take a moment to complete the questionnaire . Your answers will be used to evaluate the scientific content of the program in order to continuously improve it for future meetings .
Exhibition Opening Hours
Sunday, 16 June 2019 10:00 – 17:30 Monday, 17 June 2019 09:30 – 17:30 Tuesday, 18 June 2019 09:15 – 17:00 Wednesday, 19 June 2019 10:00 – 17:45 Thursday, 20 June 2019 09:30 – 12:00
Insurance
The congress organisers cannot accept liability for personal injuries sustained, or for loss or damage of property belonging to conference participants, either during, or as a result of the meeting . Please check the validity of your own insurance .
Language
The official language of the symposium is English . No simultaneous translation will be provided besides the translation for the Education Day program on 16 June .
Lunch
Lunch is included in the registration fee and will be served in the exhibition area . Please refer to the “Program Overview” for the times .
Registration Helpdesk Opening Hours
Sunday, 16 June 2019 07:45 – 18:30 Monday, 17 June 2019 07:30 – 17:30 Tuesday, 18 June 2019 07:30 – 17:15 Wednesday, 19 June 2019 07:30 – 17:45 Thursday, 20 June 2019 08:00 – 12:30
71
GENERAL INFORMATION
Responsibility
The participant acknowledges that she / he has no right to lodge damage claims against the organisers should the holding of the congress be hindered or prevented by unexpected political or economical events or generally by “force majeure”, or should the non-appearance of speakers or other reasons necessitate program changes . With her / his registration, the participant accepts this proviso .
By accepting the general terms and conditions, the participant declares that he/she agrees to its personal and company data being processed by Congrex Switzerland, may be forwarded to the sponsors and exhibitors of the congress and that this data may be used for information purposes on congresses and events in related fields organised by Congrex Switzerland . In the opposing case, the participant notifies Congrex Switzerland in written within 5 working days after the registration .
Speaker Service Centre (SSC)
The Speaker Service Centre (SSC) is connected to all lecture halls and is located on the 2nd floor in room Nairobi . All speakers are asked to hand in their PowerPoint presentations at the SSC at least 2 hours before the start of their lecture .
Venue
Congress Center BaselMesseplatz 214058 Basel / Switzerlandhttp://www .congress .ch
Wi-Fi
Free Wi-Fi is available throughout the congress centre .
SSID: ISPP 2019 UserID: 2450976830 Password: 6958
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EXHIBITION FLOOR PLAN & LIST OF EXHIBITORS
73
EXHIBITION FLOOR PLAN & LIST OF EXHIBITORS
List of Exhibitors
Stand CompanyNo NameA01 Bern University of Applied Sciences
A02 Grünenthal Pharma AG
A03 Arcomed AG
A04 Laboratorium Dr . G . Bichsel AG
B01 ISPP 2021 & SIG
B02 IASP
B03 The Ehlers- Danlos Society
B04 Médecins Sans Frontières (until Tuesday)
B05 Sintetica S .A .
B06 Kind und Spital (Monday only)
B07 Novartis Pharma Schweiz AG (Sunday only)
B08 SGSS/SSED (Sunday only)
B09 Sanofi-Aventis (Schweiz) AG (Sunday only)
Exhibition Dates and Hours
Sunday, 16 June 2019 10:00 – 17:30
Monday, 17 June 2019 09:30 – 17:30
Tuesday, 18 June 2019 09:15 – 17:00
Wednesday, 19 June 2019 10:00 – 17:45
Thursday, 20 June 2019 09:30 – 12:00
74
NOTES
75
NOTES
For degenerative rheumatoid disorders, for muscle, joint and nerve pain
ü pain-relieving
ü anti-inflammatory
ü decongestant
Predel. H.-G. et al. Phytomedicine 2005;12:707-714.Staiger et al., Med Monatsschr Pharm 2006;29:111–112.1) Grube B et al. Phytomedicine (2007) 14:2.1g ointment contains: 350 mg liquid comfrey extract. Supply category D. Full technical information is published under www.swissmedicinfo.ch. Iromedica AG, 9014 St.Gallen* in Switzerland
Clinically proven efficacy for patients with gonarthrosis.1)
Significant reduction of pain and stiffness and improvement of functional symptoms (p < 0.001).
reimbursed by
health insurance*
Rheumatism ointment