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International Association for the Study of Pain 2009 Annual Report
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Table of ConTenTs
Our Mission........................................................
Message from the President....................
Membership.......................................................
Advocacy.............................................................
Information.........................................................
Research............................................................
Education and Training...............................
Leadership........................................................
Message from the Treasurer..................
Financials..........................................................
Contributors to IASP..................................
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Mission
IASP brings together scientists, clinicians, health care
providers, and policy makers to stimulate and support the study of pain and to translate that knowledge into improved
pain relief worldwide.
Vision
Working together for pain relief throughout the world
our Mission
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As we near the second decade of the new millennium, it is a perfect time to review our accomplishments for the past year, and
assess how we are meeting the overall long-term goals in our Strategic Plan. With that in mind, this Annual Report looks at some of
the milestones of 2009 and the goals they support. These goals, highlighted at the top of every page, unite our diverse, international
membership and keep our leadership focused as we prioritize our limited funds and limitless opportunities. As you read the report,
you’ll see evidence of:
Our commitment to an active, international, multidisciplinary membership through increased funding for visiting professor
grants to chapters and for Council liaisons to travel to Asia and Latin America;
Our efforts to raise public awareness of the need for improved pain relief through a more comprehensive campaign for the
Global Year Against Pain® with many more translations of press releases and fact sheets;
Ways we improved distribution of knowledge and information by increasing the use of electronic communications and enhancing our website to
make it easier to access the journal PAIN®, pay dues, and buy IASP Press® books;
Our commitment to promote pain research and improve pain management in the developing world and developed countries through increased
grant funding, expansion of our developing countries education program, creation of new clinical fellowships in Latin America and Southeast Asia,
and increased travel grants to allow more trainees and others to attend the World Congress on Pain®;
Initiatives to strengthen IASP structure, performance, and visibility such as successful recruitment efforts to bring in new volunteers for our
many committees, task forces, and working groups, and a new, updated brand that enhances our visibility and image.
With the change in frequency of the World Congress on Pain to every two years, 2009 marked the first time IASP officers serve only two short years, from one
Congress to the next. With shortened timelines and an ever-growing list of projects, it is gratifying to see what our elected Council members, volunteers, and staff
accomplished. With your continued support and participation, I know that we will meet our goals as we work together for pain relief throughout the world.
G. F. Gebhart, PhD
our Mission Message froM The PresidenT
MeMbershiPActive, international, multidisciplinary membership
Chapters
A vital link between IASP and local pain researchers and clinicians, IASP’s chapters
represent the pain issues and interests of each country, united by a shared vision
of working together for pain relief throughout the world. IASP support for its
chapters was increased by $50,000 to fund visiting professor grants and other
activities. Chapters are encouraged to share their news with others through the IASP
Newsletter and website.
Four new chapters in the countries of Georgia, Ghana, Jordan, and San Marino
joined IASP as chapters-in-formation in 2009, bringing the total number of IASP
chapters to 82 at the close of the year. Full chapter status is usually conferred
only in the General Assembly at the Congress, but Bosnia-Herzegovina became a
chapter in late 2009 with a proxy vote by the Council.
Special Interest Groups
Fourteen Special Interest Groups (SIGs) allow IASP clinicians and researchers
to network, share information and discuss shared special interests with their
colleagues through online forums, e-newsletters, and meetings. In 2009, many
of the SIGs held meetings, launched e-newsletters, or published information on
the website for their members. Among the highlights:
The 3rd Meeting of the SIG on Acute Pain, “Acute Pain in Surgical Routine,” was
held in Cologne, Germany in December 2009, co-sponsored by the German
Surgical Society, DGSS and other German societies.
International Consensus Workshop, “Convergence on an Orofacial Pain
Taxonomy,” was organized by the Orofacial Pain SIG and the International RDC/
TMD Consortium Network of International Association for Dental Research on
March 30-April 1, 2009 in Miami, Florida, USA.
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“New Publications in Pediatric Pain,” a regularly
updated blog that lists recent publications in the field
of pediatric pain, was added to the Pain in Childhood
SIG website at www.childpain.org/recentpubs.
The Pain in Childhood SIG worked on the ChildKind
Hospitals Initiative in partnership with the World
Health Organization, Mayday Fund, and others.
The Pain of Urogenital Origin (PUGO) SIG held a
conference on “Convergences in Pelvi-Perineal Pain”
in Nantes, France in December 2009.
Many of the SIGs spent time planning meetings and
symposia to take place in Montréal, Canada for the
13th World Congress on Pain.
2009 IASP SIGs:
Acute Pain
Clinical/Legal Issues in Pain
Neuropathic Pain
Orofacial Pain
Pain and Movement
Pain and Pain Management in Non-Human Species
Pain and the Sympathetic Nervous System
Pain in Childhood
Pain in Older Persons
Pain of Urogenital Origin
Pain Related to Torture, Organized Violence, and War
Placebo
Sex, Gender, and Pain
Systematic Reviews in Pain Relief
Meetings
In June 2009, the 8th annual IASP Research Symposium was held in Chicago, Illinois, USA, with a focus on cancer pain. The European Federation of Chapters of IASP (EFIC), which encompasses 31 countries and 15,000 pain researchers and clinicians in Europe, held its annual Congress, “Pain in Europe VI,” in Lisbon in September 2009.
Planning for the 13th World Congress on Pain in 2010, led by Jeffrey Mogil, chair of the Scientific Program Committee, and Manon Choinière, chair of the Local Arrangements Committee, was in full swing in 2009, with a tight timeline due to the change in frequency from every three years to a biennial basis. As a result of member input, the Congress schedule was shortened by one day. Future Congresses will be held:
• 14th World Congress on Pain
Yokohama, Japan October 2–6, 2012
• 15th World Congress on Pain
Buenos Aires, Argentina October 7–11, 2014
• 16th World Congress on Pain
Europe 2016
Asia/ Australasia/ Oceania
Canada/United States
Europe
Latin America/Caribbean
Middle East/Africa
1,166
2,201
2,621
443
399
6,830
Membership
Total
Membership by Discipline
6,830Total
Anesthesiology Dentistry/Oral Medicine Internal/Family Medicine Neurology Neuroscience/Pharmacology Nursing Orthopedics/Rheumatology Other Physical/Occupational Therapy Psychiatry Psychology/ Social Sciences
2,255
226
122
1,061
299
133
1,450
358
102
558
266
Global Year Against Cancer Pain
The Global Year Against Cancer Pain campaign, which launched in October
2008 with the theme of “Raising Awareness, Improving Treatment, Growing
Support,” continued strong during 2009. Initially, 11 fact sheets were made
available to the public. By the end of the campaign in October 2009, 21 fact
sheets were available in seven different languages (Arabic, Chinese, English,
French, Portuguese, Russian, and Spanish). After a busy launch, many IASP
chapters in 2009 continued to hold events in conjunction with the Global Year
theme, such as:
January 13, 2009: The Israel Pain Association, in conjunction with the Israel
Oncologists’ Society, hosted a gallery show which showcased an artist who
experiences cancer pain. March 11, 2009: Specialists from the German Pain Society offered
information on cancer pain over a free nationwide hotline. July 24-25, 2009: The Asociacion Chilena para el Estudio del Dolor ran a
course on Cancer Pain in Viña Del Mar.
Raise public awareness of the need for improved pain relief
adVoCaCY
7 languages 18 languages
4,721 14,409
Global Year Against
Musculoskeletal Pain
Global Year Against
Cancer Pain
2008-2009 2009-2010
Fact Sheet Downloads in 1st three months of campaign:
Translations:
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adVoCaCY Global Year Against Musculoskeletal Pain
The Global Year Against Musculoskeletal Pain, led by co-chairs Lars Arendt-Nielsen
(Denmark) and Kathleen Sluka (Canada), launched in 2009 to draw attention to the disabling
pain experienced from musculoskeletal disorders. The goals for the campaign included
disseminating information on musculoskeletal pain worldwide, with a particular emphasis in
developing countries; educating pain researchers and clinicians within IASP and the larger
global community of health care professionals; increasing awareness of musculoskeletal
pain among government officials, media, and the general public worldwide; and encouraging
government leaders, research institutions, and other key decision-makers to support more
research, ultimately producing more effective and accessible treatment methods and
outcomes for people with musculoskeletal pain. A central theme—“When Moving Hurts…
Assess, Understand, Take Action”—was chosen because musculoskeletal pain is a complex
and far-reaching problem that encompasses many different types of pain including neck pain,
limb pain, low back pain, joint pain, bone pain, and chronic widespread pain.
The campaign launched on October 19, 2009 with a press release distributed globally in
Chinese, English, French, German, Indonesian, Japanese, Korean, Russian, and Spanish.
On that date, the website offered 23 fact sheets for download in five languages (Arabic,
Chinese, English, French, and Spanish). Chapter leaders volunteered to translate fact sheets
into Danish, German, Italian, Japanese, Polish, Portuguese, and Serbian. In addition to
translating fact sheets, many chapters offered translations of the logo and tagline, which
were ultimately available in all the fact sheet languages plus Romanian, Sinhala, and Tamil.
For the first time, the Global Year Task Force created an online discussion forum designated
for the campaign. Throughout the year, case studies posted to the forum provided topics
for discussion for 270 members of IASP who joined the forum. Also for the first time,
IASP made the Global Year poster available in high-resolution files for download from the
website, and offered a Global Year Event Checklist to help guide chapters and other groups
to organize events or activities around the Global Year theme.
From Symposium to SIG
On June 4-5, 2009, the 8th IASP Research Symposium, “A Global Problem: Cancer Pain from the Laboratory to the Bedside,” took place in Chicago, Illinois, USA, providing a forum for in-depth discussion and analysis of basic and clinical research surrounding the problem of cancer pain. Conference organizers Judith Paice (USA), Eija Kalso (Finland), Olaitan Soyannwo (Nigeria), and Rae Bell (Norway), also edited a book based on the symposium, Cancer Pain: From Molecules to Suffering, which was published by IASP Press in 2010. The symposium attracted a diverse international audience of 55 participants along with 23 speakers and co-chairs. Topics included basic mechanisms of cancer pain, inflammation and hyperalgesia in cancer pain, opioid tolerance, clinical trial designs in cancer pain, psychology of cancer pain, education, and international issues. Poster sessions were held to allow young investigators to share their research. In addition to the IASP grant for research symposia, industry support allowed registration fees to remain relatively low. Overwhelmingly positive evaluations requested that this conference be repeated on a regular basis. As a result of the interest shown, the Global Year Task Force moved forward with an application for a Cancer Pain Special Interest Group (SIG) within IASP.
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inforMaTionImproved distribution of knowledge and information
Attention IASP Members!
Did you know that as a new member of IASP you are entitled to one gratis copy of a book from IASP Press®? Our records show that you became a member of IASP in 2009, but you have not yet claimed your free book!
To request your copy today, go online and complete the short form at: www.iasp-pain.org/Membership/GratisBook
You will be asked to log in with your IASP username and password. If you encounter any difficulty, please contact us at [email protected] or [email protected].
Don't forget! IASP members receive a 25-35% discount on all IASP Press titles. Additionally, during our clearance sale (www.iasp-pain.org/Clearance), select IASP Press publications are available for only US$10through December 31, 2009. If you are interested in ordering additional books, you can do so at: www.iasp-pain.org/Bookstore
International Association for the Study of Pain, 111 Queen Anne Ave N, Suite 501, Seattle, WA 98109-4955 USA Tel +1.206.283.0311 - Fax +1.206.283.9403 - Email [email protected]
http://www.iasp-pain.org
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VOLUME 142 NUMBERS 1–2 MARCH 2009 ISSN 0304-3959PUBLISHED MONTHLY 142 (1–2) 1–170
JOURNAL OF THE IASP
142
1�2
PAIN
VOL.142(1–2)(2009)1–170
CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK
Electronic Communication
With the goal of improving communications to IASP members, in 2009 IASP increased the
use of electronic communications; made online improvements to make it easier to pay
dues, access the journal PAIN and buy IASP Press books; and redesigned the website.
In March, IASP switched to a new system for its email blasts to give recipients the
opportunity to manage their email preferences, reducing the percentage of messages
lost to spam or junk filters. Electronic correspondence to members more than doubled
from 2008 to 2009, with members receiving more than 70 e-blasts from IASP about
topics such as Congress registration, PAIN table of contents, new books from IASP
Press, and the Global Year. In late October, IASP launched the SIG e-newsletter template,
a change that cut down on the production time and mailing costs, enabling the staff to
send out five e-newsletters in the last two months of the year.
The IASP website sported a new look in April to reflect the new logo and rebranding,
while other changes improved the functionality of the site: the IASP Press page
incorporated “one-click” shopping; an interactive map added to the Chapter
section allows visitors to easily find chapters; SIGs received a mini-site with links
to newsletters, meetings, websites, and new discussion forums; and a new Trusted
Proxy Server for PAIN allowed members to employ a single sign-on for the IASP
website and online access to the journal. A major change came at the end of the year,
when IASP switched to an online application system, allowing members to join online.
The addition of a Quick Poll on the website to query members about their preferences
provides immediate feedback to staff on a variety of topics.
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1 JUNE–JUly 2009 IssUE 2
Inside this issueRaising Our Profile, Expanding Our Reach.....................1Global Year Update......................................................... 3Grant and Award Information.......................................... 4IASP Funds Pain Course for Nurses in Peru.................. 6Congress Update ............................................................ 7
Chapter News..................................................................8New Global Year Campaign Launches October 19........12New Members................................................................ 13IASP Remembers Former Council Member...................15Website Tips.................................................................. 16
International Meetings....................................................17Announcements.............................................................18Books Available from IASP Press .................................19Behind the Book............................................................ 21What's New at IASP?.....................................................22
®
Raising Our Profile, Expanding Our ReachIASP Participates in Pain Meetings Around the World
ASEAPS Congress in Bali. From left, sponsored delegates Vanpheng Norasingh (Laos), Bouathep Phoumindr (Laos), Khin Myo Hla (Myanmar), and Tuan Nguyen (Vietnam); Immediate-Past IASP President Troels S. Jensen (Denmark); IASP Executive Director Kathy Kreiter (USA); sponsored delegates Thaung Myint (Myanmar), Jampel Tshering (Bhutan), Ranjith Pallegama (Sri Lanka), Khantey Om (Cambodia), Anura Ariyawardana (Sri Lanka), Sovandy Chan (Cambodia), and Dat Le Huu (Vietnam)
2009 is proving to be another productive year for IASP chapter meetings and other pain-related events across the globe. Members of the IASP Council, headquarters staff, and other representatives have taken part in several such gatherings to show their support. These meetings, and the IASP information booth at each, offer opportunities to increase our visibility, invite nonmembers to join IASP, and highlight our core mission of working together for pain relief throughout the world.
ASEAPS 3rd Congress in Bali
The Joint Meeting of the 3rd Congress of the Association of Southeast Asian Pain Societies (ASEAPS) and the Neuropathic Pain Special Interest Group (NeuPSIG) took place on April 17–20 in Sanur, Bali, Indonesia. ASEAPS President Idrus A. Paturusi (Indonesia) presided over the successful gathering, which drew nearly 700 attendees mainly from Southeast Asia.
This three-day meeting, which was organized by A. Husni Tanra (Indonesia), featured talks by a number of leading pain researchers and clinicians from Southeast Asia and beyond, with sessions addressing many of the pain problems currently faced by countries in the region. While some countries have developed programs for pain management—in part because of the efforts of the IASP chapters behind ASEAPS—others, such as Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia, Brunei, Bhutan, and Myanmar, still lack the infrastructure to address their populations’ pain education and management issues.
Troels S. Jensen (Denmark), Immediate-Past President of IASP, spoke at the opening session and presented an informative overview and history of IASP since its founding in 1973. IASP Executive Director Kathy Kreiter also participated, pledging IASP’s support for the Southeast Asian countries’ pain education needs.
In addition, with financial support from IASP, nine physicians and two dentists from across the region traveled to Bali and took part in the meeting (see names in photo caption).
Other IASP participants included IASP Councilors Cynthia Goh (Singapore) and Maged El Ansari (Egypt), Past IASP President Michael R. Bond (United Kingdom), and Past IASP Councilor and current NeuPSIG Chair Rolf-Detlef Treede (Germany). They, along with Jensen and Kreiter, met with the 11 sponsored attendees to explore the need for pain management and education in their respective countries and to see how IASP might help—perhaps by forming new chapters in those countries or assisting with pain education efforts. The sponsored attendees expressed gratitude for IASP’s support and were enthusiastic about forming pain groups in their countries.
ASEAPS is comprised of pain experts from Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand, Indonesia, and the Philippines. For more information on ASEAPS and further details from the 3rd Congress, visit their website: www.aseaps2009.net (Continued on page 2)
Printed Publications
IASP Newsletter
All IASP members receive quarterly issues of the IASP Newsletter, which is also
available for members only to download in PDF format on the IASP website. The
newsletter was redesigned in 2009 and continued to provide information on IASP
leadership, chapters, SIGs, grants and fellowships, IASP Press, membership,
events, job opportunities, and more.
PAIN®
The most cited journal on the subject of pain, PAIN is edited by Editor-in- Chief
Allan I. Basbaum and 2009 Section Editors Ed Charlton (Clinical Notes), Frank
Keefe (Clinical Psychology), Eija Kalso (Clinical Sciences), Jeffry Mogil and Rolf
Detlef-Treede (Neurobiology), Karen Davis (Pain Measurement and Imaging),
Frank Porreca (Pharmacology), and Mike Rowbotham (Reviews and e-PAIN),
with the help of many associate and support editors all over the world. Once
again in 2009, the 2008 Thomson Reuteurs Journal Citation Reports confirmed
an increase in PAIN’s impact factor, which measures, among other criteria,
how often journal articles are cited during a given time period. PAIN received
an impact factor of 6.030 in 2009 (for 2008 articles cited), compared to 5.249
the year prior. Category rankings were: Anesthesiology (1/22 or first out of
the 22 journals read by anesthesiologists), Clinical Neurology (8/156) and
Neurosciences (21/219).
In January 2009, IASP’s official scientific journal adopted a new cover design
with an updated title font and more eye-catching artwork while retaining certain
graphic elements such as the adjoined capital letters in the title. In his January
2009 editorial, Editor-in-Chief Basbaum wrote, “The new cover is definitely a
21st century cover…that we believe will allow PAIN to stand out even more
from the many pain-focused journals that have appeared in recent years.” In
February 2009, PAIN began using the Elsevier Editorial System (EES), providing a
better system for editors to manage article submissions and revisions. The PAIN
Editorial Board decided to change the “Editorial” section name to “Commentary.”
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PAIN
Journal of the IASP
VOLUME 145 NUMBER 3 OCTOBER 2009 ISSN 0304-3959
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ES 1608 Pain Journal:Pain Journal - Oct 09 07/08/2009 12:21 Page 1
New PAIN® Submissions
2009
2008
2007
2006
2005
1285
1216
1112
1120
1144
FIR
ST IN
THE FIELD O
F
AN
ES T H E S IO L O
GY
Impact Factor
6.0302008 Journal Citation Reports®,
Science Edition,©Thomson Reuters
inforMaTionImproved distribution of knowledge & information
the goal of supporting the IASP Global Year Against Pain
by publishing approximately half of all issues on the
theme of the Global Year. Six issues were published in
2009; three of these featured special articles linked to the
IASP Global Year Against Cancer Pain.
Cancer Pain Management for Developing Countries
March 2009 (Volume XVII, Issue 1)
Author: Olaitan A. Soyannwo
Bone Cancer Pain
June 2009 (Volume XVII, Issue 2)
Authors: Juan Miguel Jimenez-Andrade and Patrick W.
Mantyh
What Does Pain Hurt?
July 2009 (Volume XVII, Issue 3)
Author: Daniel B. Carr
The Cancer Patient with Anxiety and Chronic Pain
September 2009 (Volume XVII, Issue 4)
Author: Ruth H. Steinman
Coping With Pain
October 2009 (Volume XVII, Issue 5)
Authors: Francis J. Keefe, Tamara J. Somers, and Sejal
M. Kothadia
U.S. Opioid Risk Management Initiatives
November 2009 (Volume XVII, Issue 6)
Author: Jane C. Ballantyne
Improved distribution of knowledge and information
International Association for the Study of Pain®IASP
PRESS®
Kathleen A. Sluka Editor
Kathleen A. Sluka Editor
Mechanisms andManagement ofPain for thePhysical Therapist
Mechanism
s and Managem
ent ofPain for the Physical Therapist
Cove
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ign: R
icha
rd Z
azul
ak
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• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
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IASP brings together scientists,
clinicians, health care providers,
and policy makers to stimulate
and support the study of pain and to
translate that knowledge into
improved pain relief worldwide.
IASP Press publishes timely,
high-quality, and reasonably priced
books relating to pain research and
treatment.
INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION
FOR THE STUDY OF PAIN
111 Queen Anne Avenue N.,
Suite 501
Seattle, WA 98109-4955 USA
www.iasp-pain.org
Recent Publications from IASP Press:
Functional Pain Syndromes: Presentationand PathophysiologyEmeran A. Mayer and M. Catherine Bushnell, EditorsApril 2009
Fundamentals of Musculoskeletal PainThomas Graven-Nielsen, Lars Arendt-Nielsen, and Siegfried Mense, EditorsJuly 2008
Pain Management for Older Adults:A self-help guideThomas Hadjistavropoulos and Heather D. Hadjistavropoulas, EditorsApril 2008
Sleep and PainGilles Lavigne, Barry J. Sessle, Manon Choinière, and Peter J. Soja, EditorsJune 2007
For detailed information on these and other IASP Press publications, visit the IASP website at: www.iasp-pain.org/Books
Recent Publications from IASP Press:
Fundamentals of Musculoskeletal PainThomas Graven-Nielsen, Lars Arendt-Nielsen, and Siegfried Mense, EditorsJuly 2008
Sleep and PainGilles Lavigne, Barry J. Sessle, Manon Choinière, and Peter J. Soja, EditorsJune 2007
Immune and Glial Regulation of PainJoyce A. DeLeo, Linda S. Sorkin, and Linda R. Watkins, EditorsNovember 2007
For detailed information on these and other IASP Press publications, visit the IASP website at: www.iasp-pain.org/books
Rubik’s Cube used by permission of Seven Towns Ltd. www.rubiks.com.
IASP brings together scientists,
clinicians, health care providers,
and policy makers to stimulate and
support the study of pain and to translate
that knowledge into improved pain
relief worldwide. IASP Press publishes
timely, high-quality, and reasonably
priced books relating to pain research
and treatment.
INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION
FOR THE STUDY OF PAIN
111 Queen Anne Avenue N.,
Suite 501
Seattle, WA 98109-4955 USA
www.iasp-pain.org
International Association for the Study of Pain ®IASP
PRESS®
Functional PainSyndromes:PRESENTATION AND PATHOPHYSIOLOGY
Emeran A. Mayer • M. Catherine Bushnell EditorsFunctional Pain Syndromes:
PRESENTATION AND PATHOPHYSIOLOGY
Emeran A. MayerM. Catherine BushnellEditors
Cove
r des
ign: R
icha
rd Z
azul
ak
®
®
Pain: Clinical Updates
The newsletter Pain: Clinical Updates aims to inform
clinicians about advances in the field, both scientific and
clinical, and where necessary, explore how scientific
advances can influence clinical practice. The strength
of the updates lies with its authors—IASP members
and experts who use the foundation of science to reach
across cultural and philosophical boundaries. Distributed
by mail to all IASP members and sent to chapter
meetings, the newsletter is also freely available on the
IASP website as a service to the medical community and
to help fulfill the educational mission of the IASP. Jane
Ballantyne, Editor-in-Chief, met with Advisory Board
members (Michael Cousins, Maria Adele Giamberardino,
Patricia McGrath, M.R. Rajagopal, Maree Smith, Claudia
Sommer, and Harriet Wittink) by teleconference in June
2009 to select the topics for the coming year. They set
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What Does Pain Hurt?Editorial Board
Editor-in-Chief
Jane C. Ballantyne, MD, FRCA Anesthesiology, Pain MedicineUSA
Advisory Board
Michael J. Cousins, MD, DSCPain Medicine, Palliative MedicineAustralia
Maria Adele Giamberardino, MD Internal Medicine, Physiology Italy
Patricia A. McGrath, PhD Psychology, Pediatric Pain Canada
M.R. Rajagopal, MDPain Medicine, Palliative MedicineIndia
Maree T. Smith, PhD Pharmacology Australia
Claudia Sommer, MDNeurologyGermany
Harriët M. Wittink, PhD, PT Physical Therapy The Netherlands
Production
Elizabeth Endres, Associate Editor Kathleen E. Havers, Programs Coordinator Rich Boram, Marketing and Communications Manager
Anxiety and Chronic PainOpioids in Cancer PainCoping with Pain
“Thank you for giving me my life back.” Through frustration and failure, the promise of hearing these words sustains those who treat pain sufferers. The first time I heard them I felt great pride. With time, however, I came to understand that my efforts and my patients’ gratitude were manifestations of a much larger process. This issue of Pain: Clinical Updates examines that bigger process and attempts to tie together some threads from my 15-year stewardship of this newsletter. As a valedictory reflection by its founding editor, it focuses upon the unique role that moral education—particularly through low-tech, social means such as conversation and personal example1—plays in sustaining the “pain community” of researchers2 and clinicians, and the value of Pain: Clinical Updates in this enterprise. Concern for pain relief reflects human instincts for fairness and empathy in the face of suffering. Pain research, education, and care are therefore intertwined with attitudes and ethics to a degree nearly unique among biomedical fields.3 Given pain’s moral dimension, pain-related educational tools that merely convey factual information often fall flat.4 Such resources—culminating in quantitative distillations of clinical evidence—typically fail to engage health care providers. We are now just beginning to understand the mechanisms through which social5,6 and cultural7 influences shape unconscious perceptions and attitudes toward people in pain. Interactions based upon shared narrative,8,9 dialogue, tutoring, and admiration1 have great persuasive power.
Moral education plays a uniquely important role in sustaining the “pain community”
These old-fashioned resources access belief and behavior on a personal scale, shape subconscious attitudes, convey tacit knowledge,10 and offer a platform for dialogue among colleagues, patients,11 and families.2 The use of Pain: Clinical Updates to support international pain education and IASP’s ongoing Global Year Against Pain campaigns illustrates the merit of this low-tech approach to pain education. Education about pain is a social process. So, too, is the very phenomenon of pain. Many seemingly paradoxical aspects of pain are readily explained from a social Darwinist perspective.
Paradoxical Pain
For many in the “first world,” daily life long ago ceased to be a struggle to survive. Population growth, pollution, urban crowding, obesity,12 diabetes, and information overload—problems generated by over-meeting basic human needs—persist even in the current economic downturn.13,14 Yet survey after survey continues to find underassessment and undertreatment of pain as the default condition in developed and developing countries alike.15,16 Pain control’s recent appearance on the agenda of regulatory agencies reflects an
Volume XVIII, Issue 3 July 2009
Upcoming Issues
®
Supported by a grant from Endo Pharmaceuticals, Inc., USA
IASP Press®
Editor-in-Chief M. Catherine Bushnell and the Advisory Board, consisting of
Lars Arendt-Nielsen, José M. Castro-Lopes, Kathleen A. Sluka, and Irene M.
Tracey, have led IASP Press in following its mission of publishing timely, high-
quality, and reasonably priced books relating to pain research and
treatment. New books released in 2009 included: Mechanisms and Management of Pain for the Physical Therapist – Kathleen
A. Sluka (Editor) Current Topics in Pain: 12th World Congress on Pain –
José M. Castro-Lopes (Editor) Functional Pain Syndromes: Presentation and Pathophysiology – Emeran A.
Mayer and M. Catherine Bushnell (Editors)
Current Topics in Pain was a departure from previous Congress proceedings
in offering only the plenary and distinguished lectures, representing the
state of the art of knowledge about many aspects of pain research and
management. Functional Pain Syndromes brought together authors from
many disciplines, including pain medicine, gastroenterology, psychiatry,
physiology, genetics, and neuroscience, and has received appreciative
reviews by various associations representing gastrointestinal disorders and
interstitial cystitis. Mechanisms and Management of Pain for the Physical
Therapist has received praise as a useful textbook for physical therapy
courses and a valuable resource for the practicing physical therapist.
The IASP Press team made progress in expanding marketing efforts beyond
the IASP membership, with outreach to university faculty, displays of books at
scientific meetings, and an increase in the number and diversity of journals
invited to review the books. With its improved website and the ease of
ordering online, the Press is continuing to provide valuable information on
pain to clinicians and scientists worldwide.
2009 Book Sales
Older Books/Clearance
Classification of Chronic Pain
Fundamentals of Musculoskeletal Pain
Pain 2008: An Updated Review
Mechanisms...Physical Therapist
Current Topics in Pain
Pain Management for Older Adults
Functional Pain Syndromes
1460
120
175
175
390
420
425
440
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researChPromote pain research
IASP increased the amount of money earmarked for grants and fellowships in 2009 in
order to provide greater support to investigators working in basic and clinical research
and to educators teaching pain management in developing countries, and to recognize
and reward outstanding contributions in the field of pain.
IASP Collaborative Research Grants
These grants of up to US15,000 each support collaborative interdisciplinary research
between two or more research groups located in different countries. IASP gives priority
to collaborations between basic science and clinical research groups. The 2009
recipients and project topics were:
Esther Pogatzki-Zahn (University Clinic Muenster, Germany) and James Eisenach
(Wake Forest University School of Medicine, USA)
Research: Does childbirth result in increased endogenous inhibition or decrease the
ability to generate hypersensitivity?
Linda Watkins (University of Colorado at Boulder, USA) and Sung Joong Lee (Seoul
National University School of Dentistry, Korea)
Research: Role of toll-like receptors in opioid-induced spinal cord microglia activation
and a development of opioid tolerance/dependence
Tonya Palermo (Oregon Health & Science University, USA) and Chris Eccleston
(Centre for Pain Research, University of Bath, UK)
Research: Internet delivery of psychological treatment for pediatric chronic pain:
essential components of successful treatments
IASP Research Grants funded by Scan|Design
Foundation BY INGER & JENS BRUUN
These grants encourage and support collaborative, multidisciplinary research between two
or more research groups located in the five Scandinavian countries (Denmark, Finland,
Iceland, Norway, and Sweden) and the United States only. Grants of up to US$25,000 each
are available for either clinical or basic research. In 2009, three research groups received
funding (two were funded in 2008) for the following projects:
12
Lindsey Cohen (Georgia State University, USA) and Rickard
Wicksell (Karolinska University Hospital, Sweden)
Research: An evaluation of the effectiveness of mindfulness
for pediatric sickle cell pain and functioning
Camilla Svensson (Karolinska Institute, Sweden) and Tony
Yaksh (University of California San Diego, USA)
Research: Toll-like receptor 4 and spinal glial activation during
inflammatory arthritis (K/BxN)
Timothy Brennan (University of Iowa Hospitals & Clinics, USA)
and Henrik Kehlet (Copenhagen University, Denmark)
Research: Translational mechanisms for postoperative pain
Early Career Grants funded by IASP (5)
and funded by Scan|Design Foundation
BY INGER & JENS BRUUN (2)
These grants of up to US$20,000 each support pain research
by IASP mentors early in their professional careers. Recently
expanded from five to seven awards, the recipients for 2009 were:
William Gibson (Curtin University, W. Australia)
Research: Temporal neuroplastic modulation of motor control
parameters associated with nociceptive afferent inputs in
healthy, acute experimental, chronic and extinguished pain
conditions
Steven Prescott (University of Pittsburgh, USA)
Research: Pain processing by neural networks: a critical link
between the molecular and perceptual changes associated
with neuropathic pain
Marucia Chacur (University of Sao Paulo, Brazil)
Research: Muscle pain: a behavioral and electrophysiological
model
Durga Mohaptra (University of Iowa, USA)
Research: Distinct chemokine modulation of TRPV1 in prostate
cancer pain
Otilia Obreja (University of Heidelberg, Germany)
Research: Axonal excitability in nociceptors
Petra Schweinhardt (McGill University, Canada)
Research: The effects of central D2-receptor blockade on pain
sensitivity and pain modulatory capacity in male and female
volunteers
Camilla Svensson (Karolinska Institute, Sweden)
Research: Inflammatory and neuropathic pain – the role of
spinal mTOR
IASP John J. Bonica Trainee Fellowship
Established in 1998 in memory of IASP’s founder, the John
J. Bonica Trainee Fellowship supports training in various
aspects of pain research and is awarded to a trainee who is in
an early stage of his or her career. For 2009, the award was
increased by nearly 43 percent to provide the trainee with up
to US$50,000 for one year of funding. The 2009 recipient was:
Lucie Low (University College London, UK)
Mentor: M. Catherine Bushnell, Montreal (McGill University,
Canada)
Research: The process of animal brain imaging, both
structural and functional; how to correlate animal imaging
and behavioral data and apply it to human imaging and
psychophysical data
IASP International Trainee Fellowship
funded by Scan|Design Foundation BY
INGER & JENS BRUUN
Established in 2006, this fellowship supports training in pain
research. Two awards up to US$50,000 each may be used for
salary and travel costs. The trainees selected in 2009 were:
Greg Scherrer (University of California, San Francisco, USA)
Mentor: Anne McDermott (Columbia University, USA)
Research: The electrophysiological techniques to characterize
opioid receptor expressing neurons and circuitry
Reza Sharif-Naeini (Institute de Pharmacologie Moleculaire
et Cellulaire, France)
Mentor: Allan Basbaum (University of California, San Francisco,
USA)
Research: Developing expertise in the genetics and anatomy
of pain using genetic tracing methods as well as viral tracing
methods to characterize neuronal circuits
Research Symposia
Awarded every other year in even years only.
13
eduCaTion and TrainingImproved pain management in developing and developed countries
Grants, Fellowships, and Collaborations
IASP is committed to help strengthen pain management infrastructure in the developing
world, and expanded efforts in this area in 2009. In addition to its educational support grants,
IASP works with professional organizations operating existing programs that share IASP’s
goal to improve education and clinical training in developing countries, and collaborates with
outside organizations to provide grants and fellowships in the developing world. In 2009,
IASP renewed its year-long international fellowship in clinical training in pain management,
which began in 2008 with a pilot project in Southeast Asia. IASP members began expansion
of this program though site visits to assess programs and venues to establish a second
clinical training fellowship in Latin America. Also, work took place on a future collaboration
with Hospice Africa for pain relief at the end of life. Assessments of the Developing Countries
Working Group, which reviews applications and reports, and works on new projects,
commented on the high standard of reports reviewed from work completed in 2008. The
following educational and pain management projects received support from IASP in 2009:
A three-month clinical/education course in Bangkok for two students at
US$10,000 at the Siriraj Hospital, Pain Relief Unit in Bangkok, Thailand.
Recipients: Dr. Soe Nyunt and Dr. Aun Kyl (Myanmar)
A one-year Clinical Training Fellowship in Bangkok, Thailand at US$5,000,
with an additional US$5,000 provided by the World Federation of Societies of
Anesthesiology (WFSA).
Recipient: Dr. Keo Phommarat (Laos) under the mentorship of Dr P.
Chaudakastrin at the Siriraj Hospital, Pain Relief Unit (Bangkok, Thailand)
Kybele, an association that works towards the improvement of childbirth and
infant survival, received funding for the second consecutive year from IASP. In
2009 this US$20,000 award was used in Armenia, Ghana and Georgia.
14
IASP’s educational support grants address the need for
improved education about pain and pain management in
developing countries. These grants aim to improve the scope
and availability of essential education for pain clinicians of
all disciplines, taking into account specific local needs. IASP
leadership increased the number of award recipients in 2009,
awarding 12 grants (up from 9 in 2008) for educational projects
in developing countries at up to US$10,000 per project:
Aderonke Akinpelu (Nigeria)
Project: Pain education courses at seven universities for
physiotherapy and rehab medicine, and for clinical workers
also at teaching hospitals
Veronica Bild (Romania)
Project: Aimed at pharmacists, four modules of post-graduate
courses on drugs, the roles of analgesics in pain treatment, and
legal aspects
Snezana Bosnjak (Serbia)
Project: Cancer pain—educational materials addressing
barriers to effective treatment for professionals and patients/
careers
Mariana Bueno (Brazil)
Project: Neonatal and basic pain education and management
Irina Jaba (Romania)
Publication and distribution of two multidisciplinary guides to
pain management
David Otieno (Kenya)
Project: Sessions one month apart of two full-day basic
education courses on pain and pain management skills for
professionals
Livia Puljak (Croatia)
Project: Courses on acute chronic pain, pain assessment and
management for Croatian health workers
M.R. Rajagopal (India)
Project: Twelve-hour module for pain management including
videos, book, Powerpoint, and text materials
Ervin Salaria (Albania)
Project: Pain management courses for post-grad specialists,
nurses, physiotherapists, and social workers
Ramani Vijayan (Malaysia)
Project: Written educational guidelines, instruction and
assessment of pain management (particularly acute pain) for
all health care professionals in medical centers
Nune Yeghiazaryan (Armenia)
Project: Monthly training sessions for doctors to be held
throughout Armenia on advances in pain management
JiJun Zhao (China)
Project: One-year-long clinical training course in pain
education (4 months lectures and 8 months clinical) to train
initial pain nurse specialists
Background map:
Countries highlighted in green
received an IASP education grant
between 2005 and 2009
The Developing Countries Project: Initiative for Improving Pain Education
15
leadershiPStrengthen IASP structure, performance, and visibility
IASP Secretariat
IASP sent more frequent and detailed communications
to all members and chapters with the launch of
e-newsletters, a better system to send broadcast emails,
and improvements to the website. All chapters began
receiving a regularly scheduled Letter from the President
devised to keep Chapter Presidents and members better
informed. The Council changed the timing of the dues
payments in 2009, so that membership terms expire at
different times during the year. This change allows dues
notices to be sent throughout the year and avoids any
delay in mailing copies of PAIN® to new members.
Members of the IASP Council serving on a Logo Task
Force launched a new brand for IASP in early 2009,
complete with a new logo, colors, and a new look for all
IASP publications and materials. Task force members
unanimously recommended the final design for its “global
appearance and for the collaborative message that it
conveys,” IASP President G.F. Gebhart announced at the
time. The logo retained a globe on the logo to reflect IASP’s
worldwide presence and the global impact of its efforts.
The “brush-stroked” effect of the globe’s image evokes
a humanistic feel that captures the core mission of IASP,
and the blue and green intersecting squares represent the
cooperative efforts of scientists and clinicians from many
different specialties.
IASP Leadership
In an effort to bring member benefits to as many areas of
the world as possible, IASP leaders traveled to chapters
all over the world in 2009 to speak at and attend national
events. The Council also made a major change to the
method of recruiting volunteers for committees in
order to create better representation from around the
world in IASP leadership. The first Call for Volunteers
went out via email to all members in February 2009,
resulting in a large number of new volunteers from
diverse geographic areas and disciplines to serve
and provide their expertise on IASP committees and
working groups. In addition to these groups, many
members serve on task forces created to work on
shorter-term projects and activities, including Wait
Times, Global Year Against Pain, and pain education
schools. Thank you to all IASP members who
volunteered their time and expertise in 2009.
16
17
IASP Officers and Councilors (2009)
President: G.F. Gebhart, PhD (USA)President-Elect: Eija Anneli Kalso, MD, DMed Sci (Finland)Immediate-Past President: Troels S. Jensen, MD, DMSc, PhD (Denmark)Secretary: Patricia McGrath, PhD (Canada)Treasurer: Beverly J. Collett, MB BS, FRCA, FFPMRCA (UK)
Councilors:Lars Arendt-Nielsen, PhD, Dr med Sci (Denmark) (2011)José Castro-Lopes, MD, PhD (Portugal) (2011)Carlos Maurício de Castro Costa, MD, MSc, PhD (Brazil) (2014)Antoon De Laat, DDS, PhD (Belgium) (2011)Maged El-Ansary, MD (Egypt) (2014)Cynthia Goh, PBM, MB BS, PhD, FAChPM, FAMS, FRCPE, FRCP (Singapore) (2014)C. Celeste Johnston, RN, DeD, FCAHS (Canada) (2014)Paul Pionchon, DDS, PhD (France) (2011)Philip Siddall, MBBS, MM, PhD, FFPMANZCA (Australia) (2011)Kathleen A. Sluka, PT, PhD (USA) (2011)Irene Tracey, PhD (UK) (2014)Judith A. Turner, PhD (USA) (2011)
IASP Liaisons (2009)Liaison to the European Federation of IASP Chapters (EFIC): Beverly J. Collett, MB BS, FRCA, FFPMRCA (UK)Liaison to Latin American countries: Fernando Cervero, MD, PhD, DSc (Canada)Liaison to Southeast Asian countries: Troels S. Jensen, MD, DMSc, PhD (Denmark)Liaison to the World Health Organization (WHO): Kathleen M. Foley, MD (USA)
2009 Committees and Working Groups
Audit CommitteeChair: Eija Kalso (Finland)
Report Highlights
The Task Force on Wait-Times, chaired by Beverly Collett (UK), was established in January 2009 to conduct an audit of existing wait times and to develop recommendations that would serve as a basis for IASP-endorsed guidelines for medically acceptable wait times for treatment of chronic pain throughout the world.
A Task Force on Summer School, chaired by Cynthia Goh (Singapore) was developed to explore expansion of the European “Summer School” that provides education and training in pain management. A recommendation was made to conduct this summer educational course in the three continents where pain services are just developing: Latin America, Africa, and Asia.
In Latin America, IASP provided financial support for chapter meetings in Colombia, Ecuador, and Argentina by financing foreign speakers at chapter meetings, and by funding a course on Basic Science of Pain preceding the Congress of the Argentinean Chapter.
In an effort to give assistance to help clinicians in countries that have limited pain management educational opportunities, IASP sponsored representatives from Bhutan, Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, Vietnam, and Sri Lanka to attend the ASEAPS meeting in Bali. The attendees were able to network with other members of the pain communities and have since engaged in additional educational opportunities and fostered IASP membership in their countries.
Committee on CommitteesChair: Eija Kalso (Finland)
Developing Countries Working GroupChair: Michael Bond (UK)
Fellowships, Grants, and Awards Working GroupChair: Lars Arendt-Nielsen (Denmark)
Finance CommitteeChair: Beverly Collett (UK)
Local Arrangements Committee (Montréal)Chair: Manon Choinière (Canada)
Membership and Chapters CommitteeChair: C. Celeste Johnston (Canada)
Nominations CommitteeChair: Troels Jensen (Denmark)
Education Initiatives Working GroupChair: Philip Siddall (Australia)
Fellowships, Grants, and Awards Working GroupChair: Lars Arendt-Nielsen (Denmark)
Financial Aid Working GroupChair: Fernando Cervero (Canada)
Pain Registry Working GroupWinfried Meissner (Germany), C. Richard Chapman (USA), and Ruth Zaslansky (Germany)
Scientific Program Committee (Montréal)Chair: Jeffrey Mogil, PhD (Canada)
Taxonomy Working GroupChair: John Loeser (USA)
Editorial Board, PAIN®
Allan Basbaum, Editor-in-Chief (USA)
Editorial Board, Pain: Clinical UpdatesJane Ballantyne, Editor-in-Chief (USA)
IASP Press® Advisory BoardM. Catherine Bushnell, Editor-in-Chief (Canada)
Message froM The Treasurer
18
IASP Accounts for 2009
I must take this opportunity to acknowledge the
work of our accounting team, our Executive Director
Kathy Kreiter and our Auditors Clark Nuber, in that
for the first time we were able to finalize the 2009
Report and Accounts at the beginning of May this
year. Last year, IASP set a target to bring forward the
audit and final accounts preparation timetable, which
previously had extended through to the second half
of the year. This is a significant achievement and one that contributes to timely and
improved financial oversight.
Financial Statements to December 31, 2009
The 2009 Accounts show total net assets of $9,326,069 at December 31, 2009.
This represents an increase of $256,569 during the 2009 financial year (compared
to the increase of $1,105,983 during the 2008 financial year—a Congress year).
IASP is not immune from the prevailing world-wide adverse economic conditions
and these did affect our income streams. Core revenue in 2009 was $3,040,177, a
decrease of $449,458 from 2008 (2008 $3,489,635). Membership dues were down
by 9%, Royalties from our journal PAIN were down by 25% and book sales by 13%.
However, IASP was able to maintain its commitment to fully funding the program
services—Publications and Education, IASP Press, and Awards and Grants. 2009
expenditure on these programs increased by $122,079 to $2,795,718 ($2,673,639 in
2008). Management and General expenses increased marginally to $401,758 (2008
$385,623). Other income and contributions of $467,441 were offset by investment
costs of $10,959 and costs associated with the 2008 and 2010 Congresses totaling
$173,230.These, together with the core income and program expenditure detailed
above, result in a change in net assets from Operating Activities of ($330,529).
However, the unrealized gain on our investment portfolio was $587,098 (in 2008
there was an unrealized loss of $456,222), which more than offsets this deficit and
culminates in the 2009 gain in net assets of $256,569.
In Conclusion
As is evident from this brief report on our Consolidated Statement of Financial Position
and Statement of Operating Activities, 2009 was a particularly challenging year for
IASP finances. The unrealized gains on investments were a welcome reversal from
the position at January 31, 2008 I reported last year. This was obviously related to
improvement in financial markets generally throughout 2009 and IASP looks forward,
hopefully, to more stable market conditions in the future. Our investment strategy
has been reviewed and action taken to further safeguard and make best use of these
assets. It is obviously of considerable concern that 2009 core revenues have decreased
substantially. The dependency of the Association on the income from PAIN has been
highlighted in every Treasurer’s Reports to Council and the Executive Committee and in
the notes to these and previous years’ accounts. The reduction in revenue from PAIN of
$576,905 from 2008 was entirely due to the fall in revenue from commercial reprints.
The Executive Committee and Council are aware of the requirement to address these
shortfalls in revenue, to carefully control costs and to be cautious in our use and
application of funds.
Respectfully submitted,
Beverly Collett
Treasurer
Treasurer’s Report
finanCials
19
2009 2008AssetsCurrent Assets:Cash $3,887,326 $3,773,749 Other receivables 13,225 177,641 Prepaid expenses 431,059 110,009 Inventory, net of reserve (Note 1) 273,334 435,090 Congress receivable 498,566 251,015 Royalty receivable 566,127 535,683
Total Current Assets 5,669,637 5,283,187
Investments (Note 2) 6,003,412 5,343,976 Furniture, equipment and software, net (Note 3) 94,710 111,561 Intangible asset, net (Note 6) 341,250 354,375
Total Assets $12,109,009 $11,093,099
LiAbiLities And net AssetsCurrent Liabilities:Accounts payable $50,947 $243,469 Related party payable (Note 8) 815,846 770,078 Accrued liabilities 41,225 38,904 Grants payable 65,900 137,050 Deferred revenue 1,809,022 834,098
Total Current Liabilities 2,782,940 2,023,599
Net Assets:Unrestricted Undesignated, available for operations 8,877,319 8,613,387 Designated by the Board of Directors for discretionary use 72,612 73,211
Total Unrestricted 8,949,931 8,686,598
Temporarily restricted (Note 7) 376,138 382,902
Total Net Assets 9,326,069 9,069,500
Total Liabilities and Net Assets $12,109,009 $11,093,099
INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR THE STUDY OF PAIN AND SUBSIDIARYConsolidated Statement of Financial PositionDecember 31, 2009 (With Comparative Totals for 2008)
The accompanying Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements, which provide additional details beyond those summarized in the Financial Statement, are available for viewing in the members’ area of the IASP website at: www.iasp-pain.org
Please direct any questions about the Financial Statement to the IASP Secretariat Office (see Contact Information on back cover).
20
temporarily total totalUnrestricted Restricted 2009 2008
OPeRAtinG ACtiVitiesRevenue and Support:Membership dues $739,069 $- $739,069 $812,945 Book sales 147,867 147,867 170,303 Investment returns (10,685) (274) (10,959) (207,239)Royalties 1,696,759 1,696,759 2,273,664 2008 Congress (Note 1) 3,038 3,038 5,875,882 Other income 193,711 193,711 197,683 Contributions 80,290 193,440 273,730 242,279 Net assets released from restrictions 199,930 (199,930)
Total Operating Revenue and Support 3,049,979 (6,764) 3,043,215 9,365,517
exPenses:Program Services:Publications and education 1,166,452 1,166,452 1,371,999 IASP Press 658,286 658,286 513,401 Awards and grants 970,980 970,980 788,239 Congress (Note 1) 176,268 176,268 4,743,850
Total Program Services 2,971,986 2,971,986 7,417,489
Supporting Services:Management and general 401,758 401,758 385,623
Total Operating Expenses 3,373,744 3,373,744 7,803,112
Change in Net Assets from Operating Activities (323,765) (6,764) (330,529) 1,562,405
Unrealized gains (losses) on investments (Note 2) 587,098 587,098 (456,422)
Change in Net Assets 263,333 (6,764) 256,569 1,105,983
Net Assets:Beginning of year 8,686,598 382,902 9,069,500 7,963,517
End of Year $8,949,931 $376,138 $9,326,069 $9,069,500
INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR THE STUDY OF PAIN AND SUBSIDIARYConsolidated Statement of ActivitiesFor the Year Ended December 31, 2009 (With Comparative Totals for 2008)
21
2009 2008
CAsh FLOws FROm OPeRAtinG ACtiVities:Change in net assets $256,569 $1,105,983
Adjustments to reconcile change in net assets to net cash provided by operating activities:
Depreciation and amortization 63,245 48,093
Realized and unrealized loss (gain) on investments, net (438,837) 919,410
Loss on disposal of equipment 2,660
Changes in assets and liabilities:Pledges receivable 19,392
Congress receivable (247,551) (251,015)
Royalties receivable (30,444) 2,149
Prepaid expenses (321,050) 480,875
Other receivables 164,416 (132,999)
Inventory 161,756 71,151
Accounts payable (192,522) 71,493
Related party payable 45,768 31,974
Accrued liabilities 2,321 (11,959)
Grants payable (71,150) (50,750)
Deferred revenue 974,924 (1,004,894)
Net Cash Provided by Operating Activities 370,105 1,298,903
CAsh FLOws FROm inVestinG ACtiVities:Proceeds from sale and maturities of investments 2,803,735 221,745
Purchases of investments (3,024,334) (231,803)
Purchases of equipment (35,929) (31,308)
Net Cash (Used) Provided by Investing Activities (256,528) (41,366)
Net Change in Cash 113,577 1,257,537
Cash balance, beginning of year 3,773,749 2,516,212
Cash Balance, End of Year $3,887,326 $3,773,749
ConTribuTors To iasP
John J. Bonica Trainee
Fellowship Fund
Luis Aliaga
Ben Aronson
Karen Berkley
Robert Boas
Daniel Carr
Young Cha
Jen-Kun Cheng
Kenneth Craig
Tess Cramond
Daniel Doleys
Mary Ersek
Isabel Franky
Francois Fugere
Teodor Goroszeniuk
Gunnar Hanekop
Bradford Hare
Takahiko Hayashi
Tomas Hokfelt
Robert Hurley
Felicien Hurstel
Tetsuya Iijima
Kenichirou Inomata
Katherine Jackson
Troels Jensen
Ronald Katz
Yuri Kolesnikov
Natsu Koyama
Chris Main
Ruth Marshall
Yutaka Masuda
Danuta Mendelson
George Mendelson
Torben Mogensen
Takumi Nagaro
James Robinson
Yasumichi Sasaki
Alan Saunders
Kazuyuki Serada
Jordi Serra
Vayden Stanley
Michael Stanton-Hicks
Laura Stone
Sandra Stuckey
Fumikazu Takeda
Suyin Tan
Mark Taylor
Carl Von Baeyer
Zivan Vrabl
Keith Wilson
Max Zusman
Adopt-A-Member Program
Karen Berkley
Michael Bond
D. Norman Buckley
Daniel Carr
Marshall Devor
Tore Eliasson
Julia Fleming
Cornelia Haag Molkenteller
Victoria Harding
Naomi Hirakawa
Sjoerd Hondema
Robert Hurley
Matthew Jarrett
Troels Jensen
Louisa Jones
John Loeser
David Lopata
S. L. Peter Lothman
Chris Main
Ruth Marshall
Carolyne Montgomery
William Notcutt
Timothy Pavy
Michael Pollack
J. Anne Pollett
Jeffrey Reinking
Jordi Serra
Philip Siddall
Hugo Stam
Suyin Tan
Caroline Van Laere
Paul Van ‘T Hoff
Carl Von Baeyer
Waraporn Waikakul
Adopt-A-University
Library Program
Michael Bond
Geoffrey Booth
Daniel Carr
Angel Carrasco
Gunnar Hanekop
Troels Jensen
Judith Kortlepel
John Loeser
Chris Main
Ruth Marshall
Henry Miyoshi
Valerie Piguet
Jordi Serra
Suyin Tan
Stephen Taylor
Rolf-Detlef Treede
Francis Veyckemans
Carl Von Baeyer
Lynda Wells
Developing Countries
Education Fund
Luis Aliaga
Jane Ballantyne
Guy Bannink
Carol Barnett
Carlos Barutell
Alessandra Bergadano
Daniel Berge
Jorgen Boivie
Michael Bond
Geoffrey Booth
Walter Braun
Cary Brown
Allen Burton
Carol Burton
Fiona Campbell
William Campbell
Giancarlo Carli
Daniel Carr
Plernsri Charuworn
Ian Clarke
Frances Cole
Alexandra Dugdale
Sergio Ferreira
Hugh Gallagher
Stephen Gilbert
Debra Gordon
Kazuo Hanaoka
John Hancock
Gunnar Hanekop
Gerhard Hege-Scheuing
Anthony Herbert
Stephen Hersh
Kazuo Higa
Tadashi Hisamitsu
Yuuichi Hori
William Howard
Felicien Hurstel
IASP is grateful for the support we receive for our grants and fellowships, our Congress, our publications, and other programs we provide to advance the study and
treatment of pain worldwide. We extend special thanks to all of the individuals, foundations, institutions, and companies that have made donations over the past year.
Names are listed alphabetically within each category.
22
Carol Ann Iadeluca
Subhash Jain
Michael Jennings
Troels Jensen
Barbara Jessen
Marion Johnson
Robert Johnson
Janet Keast
Edwin Kirk
Ulf Kongsgaard
Margaretha Koper
Heinz Laubenthal
Bernard Le Polain De Waroux
George Lederhaas
Norbert Lemler
Piers Lesser
John Loeser
S. L. Peter Lothman
Mary Lynch
Marc Maes
Chris Main
Ruth Marshall
Colin Merridew
Vincent Molony
Charles Moore
Edward Morgan
Nellie Muirden
Andreia Negron
William Notcutt
Kevin O’Sullivan
Victor Pace
Dianne Pacey
Judith Paice
Teresa Pellino
Janet Ploss
Michael Pollack
Michael Priestley
Srinivasa Raja
Shrawan Singh Rathore
Irene Reinhold
Jeffrey Reinking
Gail Sakuma
Jorge Sarango Aguila
Jamir Sarda
Yasumichi Sasaki
Arunas Sciupokas
Jordi Serra
Yair Sharav
Yoshi-Nobu Shoji
Christopher Spanswick
Gary Strichartz
Mitsuhiro Sunakawa
Suyin Tan
Martin Tegenthoff
Allen Togut
Fernando Torre Mollinedo
Stephen Tyrer
Enrique Vazquez Rodriguez
Francis Veyckemans
Johannes Vlaeyen
Carl Von Baeyer
Olav Wajer
Mark Ware
Lynda Wells
Peter Wemyss-Gorman
Amanda Williams
Peter Wilson
Roland Woerz
Mitsuaki Yamamoto
Hideo Yamamura
Joanna Zakrzewska
Manfred Zimmermann
IASP General Fund
Victor Chang
Martin Cheatle
Heinrich Fruhstorfer
Olalekan Ganiu
Harold Merskey
Stephen Morley
Network for Good
Peter Williams
Global Year Against Pain
Endo Pharmaceuticals, Inc.
Pain: Clinical Updates
Endo Pharmaceuticals, Inc.
Research Grants, Early
Career Grants, Trainee
Fellowships
Scan|Design Foundation
BY INGER & JENS BRUUN
Special Interest Group
(SIG) Funds
Allergan Inc.
(Pain and Placebo)
Novartis Animal Health Inc.
(Pain and Pain
Management in Non-
Human Species)
QPRN
(Pain and Pain
Management in
Non-Human Species)
Special Projects
Mayday Fund for Pain
Research
World Congress on Pain
Archimedes Pharma Ltd.
Association Québécoise de la
Douleur Chronique
Biovail Pharmaceuticals
Canada
Boston Scientific
Centre Hospitalier de
l’Université de Montréal
Cephalon, Inc.
Charles River Laboratories
Canada
Eli Lilly and Company
Endo Pharmaceuticals
Grünenthal GmbH
IITC Inc./Life Science
Janssen-Ortho
King Pharmaceuticals, Inc.
Medtronic Inc.
Merck & Co., Inc.
Merck Frosst Canada Ltée
MSD Pharmaceuticals
Mundipharma Ltd.
Nycomed Canada
Pfizer Inc.
ProStrakan Group PLC
Purdue Pharma Canada
Purdue Pharma LP USA
QRx Pharma
Quebec Tourism Industry
The Research Institute of the
McGill University
Health Centre
Société Québécoise de la
Douleur
St. Jude Medical
Stoelting Co.
Université de Montréal
University Laval Robert-
Gifford
University of Toronto School
of Dentistry
Wyeth Pharmaceuticals
Affiliate Members
Elsevier
Endo Pharmaceuticals
Purdue Pharma L.P.
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IASP Staff (2010)
Executive Director: Kathy Kreiter
Accounting Coordinator: Susan Couch
Associate Editor–IASP Press: Elizabeth Endres
Editorial Assistant–PAIN: Keith Peterson
Grants Coordinator/PAIN Liaison: Kathy Havers
Marketing and Communications Manager: Karen Smaalders
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Page 1Global Year Against Cancer Pain poster, Brazil; Kybele program
teaches nurse anesthesia students how to use peripheral
nerve stimulators, Ghana; Chilean Chapter Meeting; Pain Nurse
Specialists Training at Hangzhou Sir Run Run Shaw Hospital, China.
Page 28th IASP Research Symposium on Cancer Pain, Chicago, USA;
Croatian Chapter campaign against cancer pain; Malaysian nurses
receive training in pain management.
Page 4IASP President G. F. Gebhart and Latin American Iiaison Fernando
Cervero at the Colombian Chapter Meeting; Myanmar Chapter
Meeting; Poster for Chilean Chapter Meeting; Nigerian Chapter’s
12th Scientific Conference and Annual General Meeting.
Page 6Israel Pain Association and Israel Oncologists’ Society showcase
work of artist with cancer pain; Global Year Against Cancer Pain
holiday card from Croatian chapter; Brazilian Chapter’s Global Year
Against Musculoskeletal Pain poster; Australian Pain Society’s
Global Year Against Musculoskeletal Pain poster.
Page 8PAIN Editor-in-Chief Allan Basbaum; Pain and Movement SIG
e-newsletter; IASP e-blast with new branding; New look for IASP
website; Redesigned IASP Newsletter, June/July 2009; A new look
for PAIN, March 2009.
Page 10Pain: Clinical Updates Editor-in-Chief Jane Ballantyne; Pain: Clinical
Updates: What Does Pain Hurt?, July 2009; Mechanisms and
Management of Pain for the Physical Therapist; Current Topics in Pain:
12th World Congress on Pain; Functional Pain Syndromes: Presentation
and Pathophysiology; IASP Press Editor-in-Chief M. Catherine Bushnell.
Page 14Nurses in the first Pain Nurse Specialists program in China learn
how to control the pain of terminally ill patients at Xinhua
Hospital’s hospice center; A Malaysian team of pain specialists
teaches health care professionals how to assess and managed
pain; Health care workers at a Ghana birthing center learn CPR
through a Kybele program.
Page 16New IASP logo launched in February 2009; Immediate-Past
President Troels Jensen and President G.F. Gebhart; Egyptian
Chapter Meeting; Treasurer Beverly Collett.
Photos(listed by page, L-R)
Meetings and Education Manager: Terry Onustack
Membership Coordinator: Marleda Di Pierri
Program Coordinator: Kiley Thornton
Program Assistant: Irena Zlatanovic
Support Editor–PAIN: Jane Milliken
Web Coordinator: Sarah Reebs
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®
International Association for the Study of Pain®
111 Queen Anne Avenue N, Suite 501Seattle, WA 98109-4955Tel: +1 206 283 0311Fax: +1 206 283 9403Email: [email protected]: www.iasp-pain.org