Professor Lorimer Moseley on the brain and mind in chronic pain by BMJ talk medicine published on 2014-06-13T16:56:22Z Professor Lorimer Moseley holds the Inaugural Chair in Physiotherapy at the University of South Australia as well as being a Professor of Neurosciences. He completed his PhD in 2002 and has both learned and shared wisdom at the Universities of Queensland, Sydney and Oxford before settling in Adelaide. He leads the Body in Mind Research Group and coauthored the best-selling ‘Explain Pain’. In this podcast he answers questions from Ebonie Rio, Department of Physiotherapy, Monash University, covering the important difference between pain and nociception, and sharing thoughts on how pain science can help clinicians working in sports medicine. You’ll hear him share the best, and worst, ways to explain pain to patients. He predicts how low back pain management will look in 100 years’ time. As always with Lorimer Moseley. expect thoughtful reflections shared with big dob of humour and humility. See also: TEDx talk ‘Why things hurt’: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gwd-wLdIHjs Acupuncture applied as a sensory discrimination training tool decreases movement-related pain in patients with chronic low back pain more than acupuncture alone: a randomised cross-over experiment http://goo.gl/zaNX8s Are children who play a sport or a musical instrument better at motor imagery than children who do not? http://goo.gl/Xv9Qum Exercise is medicine, for the body and the brain: http://bjsm.bmj.com/content/48/12/943.full Chronic traumatic encephalopathy in sport: a systematic review: http://bjsm.bmj.com/content/48/2/84.full Genre Medicine Comment by Patrick Kidd question about harmful statements 2018-10-17T08:28:29Z Comment by Da-WolfMuzic lit 2017-06-05T07:35:01Z