INTERVIEW: The role of non-medical interventions in managing chronic pain

WEEKEND ONE ON ONE Lorimer Moseley Source: AAP
One in five people in Australia and New Zealand will experience chronic pain at some stage in their lives; and it's recognised as a major global health issue. Unrelieved pain can affect every area of a person's life with major social, financial and emotional consequences. Researchers at the University of New South Wales and Neuroscience Research Australia have done a randomised trial focusing on the experiences of people with chronic pain - and the role emotional processing plays in managing chronic pain conditions. Professor Lorimer Moseley is a professor of Clinical Neurosciences at the University of South Australia and the Chair of PainAdelaide. In this episode of Weekend One on One, he spoke with Peggy Giakoumelos on the role of psychology in chronic pain management.
Share
Recommended for you
08:18

Pope Leo XIV: Robert Prevost elected to lead the Catholic Church
Roman Catholicism
05:43


'Three-way race': Could Jacqui Lambie lose her Senate seat?
federal election 2025

Greens lose two Brisbane seats, with leader Adam Bandt's Melbourne seat also at risk
federal election 2025

Who are the Senate candidates? The 2025 election lists, in full
federal election 2025