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Join us on the last Friday of every month!

A discussion between scientists, health professionals, educators, and pain advocates on a myriad of topics related to chronic pain. Offering a platform for innovative minds to bring forward inspiring ideas and discover solutions to help you in your practice. 

 

Before attending or watching any National Pain Round sessions, please read our disclaimers.

#CanadianPainRounds

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National Pain Round Archive

Introducing National Pain Rounds for Trainees!  See the Schedule >

Exclusive access to full National Pain Rounds and Pain Rounds for Trainees session videos will be granted first to our valued members. Our broader audience can enjoy complete sessions one month after recording date.  Want to rewatch sessions right away? Become a Member

National Pain Rounds and other virtual events are NOT Medical Advice.  These are discussions between scientists, health professionals, educators, and pain advocates. The views, opinions, and commentary of the presenters are for information purposes only and are not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice. Always seek the advice of a licensed healthcare provider before making any changes to your healthcare regimen.

May, 2025

May, 2025

Microbiome Matters: New Insights into Fibromyalgia

John Pereira
Brad Kerr
Amalya Grodzinsky
Amir Minerbi
Emerson Krock

Fibromyalgia is a chronic condition characterized by widespread pain, affecting many individuals globally. Despite its prevalence, the underlying causes remain poorly understood. Traditionally, the central nervous system has been recognized as a major contributor to fibromyalgia. However, recent research highlights the importance of the peripheral nervous system and the immune system in this condition. Preclinical research has identified a role for antibodies in fibromyalgia pain in a subset of patients. Emerging evidence suggests that the gut microbiome may play a causal role in fibromyalgia pain. This talk will explore the potential link between the gut microbiome and antibodies in fibromyalgia and how modulating the gut microbiome could be a promising approach to managing fibromyalgia. ​ Learning Objectives: Review the links between the gut microbiome and fibromyalgia. Describe the latest research about the role of autoreactive antibodies in fibromyalgia and how they may be linked to the gut microbiome. Discuss how the recent advances in our understanding of the gut microbiome and autoreactive antibodies in fibromyalgia could impact patient care.

April, 2025

April, 2025

Medical Assistance in Dying for patients with Chronic Pain

Gillian Maguire

Exploring MAiD for patients with chronic pain. This discussion will focus on the reality of patients requesting MAiD with chronic pain as their main diagnosis. What are the current statistics? What is being asked of you if you are asked to provide an expert opinion by a MAiD assessor. We will explore the experience of providers and discuss how the practice is not quite what you read about in the media.

2025, April

2025, April

Neurologically Mediated Chronic Pelvic Pain

Katie Luciani
Nucelio Lemos
Elise De
Hance Clarke

An estimated 6-30% of people worldwide experience chronic pelvic pain (CPP). CPP occurs in 20% of women of reproductive age and has been recognized as a globally neglected reproductive health morbidity. Although most who practice pelvic medicine are versed in treating organ-based pain specific to their subspecialty, neurologically-mediated pain represents a learning gap - involving a separate set of diagnostic and interventional skills. This session will describe the experience of a person with lived experience who has endometriosis and whose pain is categorically dismissed by family and healthcare providers. We will then discuss the diagnosis and management of endometriosis and highlight new education tools for patients created at an academic pain program for empowered waiting in cases where patients are on long waitlists for specialized care. Learning Objectives: Appreciate the experience of a person who has chronic pelvic pain and whose pain is dismissed by family and healthcare providers. Discuss the multiple generators of chronic pelvic pain and the challenges of diagnosis and management of these conditions Discuss how to navigate the healthcare system with chronic pelvic pain. Discuss directions for research and policies on management and system wide solutions for chronic pelvic pain

2025, March

2025, March

One Thing, Many Voices: Pain Science Through Collaboration

David Kennedy
Jennifer Daly-Cyr
Keith Meldrum
Josh Pate
Sandra Hilton
Maria Pavlova

Persistent pain is complex—but how we talk about it can be transformative. The 'One Thing, Many Voices' Canadian Pain Rounds showcase a unique knowledge translation initiative that brings together researchers, clinicians, educators, and people with living/lived experience to share insights on pain science. By weaving these diverse perspectives into the One Thing video series, we look forward to meaningful conversations that shift how pain is understood and managed, both clinically and socially. Participants will leave with practical tools to improve knowledge, foster empathy, and integrate evidence-informed strategies into practice. Learning Objectives: Explain how a multidisciplinary approach to knowledge translation in the One Thing video series fosters collaboration across researchers, clinicians, educators, and people with living/lived experience with pain, enhancing our understanding of persistent pain. Describe the impact of including people with living/lived experience with pain in the One Thing interviews, highlighting how their lived experiences influence the dissemination of pain science and shift clinical and societal perspectives on persistent pain. Identify practical strategies for clinicians to incorporate One Thing video insights into their practice, improving patient education, fostering empathy, and promoting evidence-informed approaches to managing persistent pain.

2025, February

2025, February

Spontaneous Intracranial Hypotension – A curable cause of medically refractory headaches and chronic pain

Michael Knash

Open to learners in the field of pain medicine, sessions will enhance medical education by promoting standardized pain management practices, fostering collaboration among those practicing pain medicine, and improving patient outcomes through evidence-based pain assessments and treatment practices.

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Pain Education for Professionals and Trainees

March

Introducing the First National Health Standard for Pediatric Pain Management

The new pediatric pain management health standard was developed in partnership between Solutions for Kids in Pain (SKIP) and the Health Standards Organization. It is the first of its kind in Canada and globally, and responds to recommendations in Health Canada’s Action Plan for Pain in Canada (March 2021). The new pediatric pain management health standard provides guidance to health organizations on quality and equitable pediatric pain management across hospital settings that provide inpatient, procedural, and/or outpatient pain management services to children from birth to 19 years less one day. This presentation and discussion will introduce attendees to the pediatric pain management health standard structure and content, its development process, and its intended impact. Speakers include health professionals, standard development experts, and people with lived experience who contributed directly to the development of the pediatric pain management standard.

National Pain Rounds Archive

National Pain Rounds and other virtual events are NOT Medical Advice.  These are discussions between scientists, health professionals, educators, and pain advocates. The views, opinions, and commentary of the presenters are for information purposes only and are not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice. Always seek the advice of a licensed healthcare provider before making any changes to your healthcare regimen.

Our National Pain Rounds Committee

Our National Pain Rounds Committee is made up of experienced healthcare professionals who strive to uphold and maintain the integrity of the Canadian Pain Society as dedicated volunteers. 

Co-Chair

Dr. John Xavier Pereira

Previous President of the Canadian Pain Society, previous President of the Pain Society of Alberta, and a Founding Co-Chair of the Alberta Pain Strategy. He is a past Ronald Melzack Fellow of the McGill Pain Center and has spoken on the topic of chronic pain both nationally and internationally, including at the Centers for Disease Control, ANZCA Auckland, Massachusetts General Hospital, and the Mayo Clinic. He represented Western Canada on the committee of physicians who wrote our country’s National Guidelines for the diagnosis and treatment of fibromyalgia. Dr. John Pereira was the physician lead of FibroFOCUS, an interdisciplinary chronic pain program that won a 2016 Patient Experience Award from the Health Quality Council of Alberta. He was a member of the Canadian Pain Task Force's External Advisory Panel and a current member of Pain Canada's National Advisory Council. He has personally visited more than sixty pain clinics worldwide to learn best practices.

Co-Chair

Dr. Helena Daudt

Director of Education at Pain BC/Pain Canada. She leads Pain BC/Pain Canada’s educational initiatives including Making Sense of Pain, a self-management program designed for people living with pain, who experience marginalization and face barriers to accessing care and support. As an educator and researcher, Dr Daudt has been supporting healthcare improvement through patient engagement and knowledge exchange in different settings. She is also a person living with chronic pain and brings the lived experience lens to the work she does. Dr Daudt is passionate about building capacity among people with lived experience, their support network, and healthcare providers to ensure people receive high-quality care and experience the best quality of life possible.

Co-Chair

Dr. Bradley Kerr

Dr. Bradley Kerr received his BSc in Psychology from McGill University. He then went on to obtain a Ph.D. in Neuroscience from the University of London-King’s College in the UK. His PhD research was aimed at understanding the role of novel modulatory peptides, growth factors and pro-inflammatory cytokines in persistent pain. Dr. Kerr went on to do postdoctoral work at the California Institute of Technology and at McGill University where his work focused on studying inflammatory responses after nervous system injury. Dr. Kerr joined the Department of Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine at the University of Alberta in 2007 and is also an adjunct professor in the Department of Pharmacology and Psychiatry. The focus of research in his lab is aimed at addressing the mechanisms of chronic pain after injury or disease with a major focus on chronic pain associated with Multiple Sclerosis.

 

Dr. Eugene Maida

Assistant Clinical Professor in the Departments of Medicine (Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation) with a cross appointment in the Department of Anesthesia at McMaster University. Dr. Maida is a physiatrist and interventional pain physician with a special interest in spine and musculoskeletal medicine. He completed his residency in Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation and later completed subspecialty training in the Pain Medicine residency program under the Department of Anesthesia at McMaster University. He has also completed a sports medicine research fellowship at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester Minnesota, with a focus on Ultrasound Guided Musculoskeletal and Peripheral Nerve Interventions, as well as his diplomat in Sports and Exercise Medicine Physician through the Canadian Academy of Sports and Exercise Medicine (CASEM). Dr. Maida is currently the Medical Director of the Michael G. DeGroote pain clinic at McMaster University and Head of Service at Hamilton Health Sciences for Pain Behaviours for the department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation. In addition to being the co-chair of National Pain Rounds for trainees, Dr. Maida is also part of the National Pain Rounds Committee.

Dr. Tania Di Renna

Dr. Tania Di Renna, Associate Professor at the University of Toronto, Department of Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine, completed her medical school and Anesthesiology residency training in Ottawa. She obtained a chronic pain fellowship at St. Michael’s Hospital in Toronto and has spinal cord stimulation training from Montreal Neurological Institute. 

She is currently the Medical Director of the Toronto Academic Pain Medicine Institute (TAPMI). TAPMI is the comprehensive interdisciplinary academic pain program serving as the hub for chronic pain care in Toronto. She is also the Medical Director of the Chronic Pain Clinic at Women’s College Hospital and an Anesthesiologist at UHN. She served as the co-chair of the HQO Guidelines for Chronic Pain, is currently the co-chair of the Ontario Chronic Pain Network and Ontario Representative for Pain Canada.

 

Jennifer Daly-Cyr

Jennifer’s professional background is in marketing and strategic planning in higher education. Since a sudden onset of severe abdominal pain, she has been on a journey of learning to live with persistent acute episodes of pain and adapting to the dramatic changes this has brought to her daily life. She has leveraged her skills and experience to advocate, collaborate and share her perspective as a person with lived experience/patient partner/advisor with national and provincial pain research initiatives and projects, including with the Chronic Pain Network, Pain Ontario and the Canadian Pain Society. She advocates for the incorporation of the lived experience perspective into research, broadened awareness of chronic pain, improving understanding about the value of patient engagement in research and for improved access to health care and support for people living with pain.

Co-Chair

Dr. Eugene Maida

Assistant Clinical Professor in the Departments of Medicine (Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation) with a cross appointment in the Department of Anesthesia at McMaster University. Dr. Maida is a physiatrist and interventional pain physician with a special interest in spine and musculoskeletal medicine. He completed his residency in Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation and later completed  subspecialty training in the Pain Medicine residency program under the Department of Anesthesia at McMaster University. He has also completed a sports medicine research fellowship at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester Minnesota, with a focus on Ultrasound Guided Musculoskeletal and Peripheral Nerve Interventions, as well as his diplomat in Sports and Exercise Medicine Physician through the Canadian Academy of Sports and Exercise Medicine (CASEM). Dr. Maida is currently the Medical Director of the Michael G. DeGroote pain clinic at McMaster University and Head of Service at Hamilton Health Sciences for Pain Behaviours for the department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation. Dr. Maida has worked as a team physician with the McMaster University varsity soccer and football teams, Canadian Junior National Basketball Team (NEDA) and is currently the Head Team Physician for the Hamilton Tiger Cats (CFL). Dr. Maida is also actively involved in resident and medical school education. He currently serves as Section Coordinator for pain medicine teaching in the department Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation and Education Coordinator for the Pain Medicine residency program under the department of Anaesthesia. Dr. Maida is also the current Chair of the Anesthesia pain rounds, and Lecturer for undergraduate introductory pain session for McMaster University medical students. In addition to being the co-chair of National Pain Rounds for trainees, Dr. Maida is also part of the National Pain Rounds Committee.

David Clinkard (1)_edited.jpg

Co-Chair

Dr. David Clinkard

Dr. Clinkard is an anesthesiologist and pain medicine specialist based in Kingston Ontario. He did his anesthesia training at University of Toronto and his Pain Medicine residency at McMaster. Currently his research and clinical interests focus on peripheral joint pain and its treatments.

Our Trainee Chairs

A platform for innovative minds to bring forward inspiring ideas and discover solutions to help you in your mentorship programs.

Providing educational resources for learners in efforts to prepare the next generation of pain management clinicians for the full scope of practice opportunities, from basic science research transitioning into clinical practice.

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