Our Members
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"The prevalence of pain is projected to increase as Australia's population ages - from around 3.2 million Australians in 2007 to 5.0 million by 2050." - The High Price of Pain, Access Economics and the MBF Foundation, 2007
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Our members are organisations representing healthcare professionals and consumers concerned with pain and pain management, as well as academic and research institutions and insurers.
Painaustralia is grateful to its members who support our work and strengthen our ability to influence government policies and programs.
In addition, we have a wide network of related organisations who contributed to and support the National Pain Strategy.
Our current members are:
- Aged Care Queensland Incorporated www.acqi.org.au
- Abilita Services www.abilita.net.au
- Alcohol and Other Drugs Council of Australia www.adca.org.au
- Alzheimers Australia www.alzheimers.org.au
- ANZCA and its Faculty of Pain Medicine www.anzca.edu.au/fpm
- Arthritis Foundation of NSW www.arthritisnsw.org.au
- Arthritis Queensland www.arthritis.org.au
- Arthritis Victoria www.arthritisvic.org.au
- Arthritis ACT www.arthritisact.org.au
- Australian Acupuncture and Chinese Medicine Association www.acupuncture.org.au
- Australian Association of Musculoskeltal Medicine www.musmed.com
- Australasian Faculty of Musculoskeletal Medicine www.afmm.com.au
- Australian Osteopathic Assocation www.osteopathic.com.au
- Australian and New Zealand Society of Palliative Medicine www.anzspm.org.au
- Australian Pain Management Association www.painmanagement.org.au
- Australian Pain Society www.apsoc.org.au
- Australian Dental Association Inc www.ada.org.au
- Australian Federation of AIDS Organisations www.afao.org.au
- Australian Feldenkrais Guild Inc www.feldenkrais.org.au
- Australian Physiotherapy Association www.physiotherapy.asn.au
- Australian Self-Medication Industry www.asmi.com.au
- Australian Society of Rehabilitation Counsellors www.asorc.org.au
- Australian Society of Teachers of the Alexander Technique www.austat.org.au
- Brain Foundation www.brainfoundation.org.au
- Breast Cancer Network Australia www.bcna.org.au
- Bridges & Pathways Institute (SA)
- Cancer Council Australia www.cancer.org.au
- Cancer Voices Australia www.cancervoicesaustralia.org.au
- Cancer Voices NSW www.cancervoicesnsw.org.au
- Cancer Voices Victoria Inc www.cancervoicesvic.org.au
- Carers Australia www.carersaustralia.org.au
- Chronic Pain Australia www.chronicpainaustralia.org.au
- Chronic Pain Consumer Network (SA)
- Clinical Oncological Society of Australia www.cosa.org.au
- Edgecliff Physiotherapy Centre www.edgecliffphysio.com.au/
- Empower Rehab www.empowerehab.com
- Headache Australia www.headacheaustralia.org.au
- Hunter Pain Clinic www.hunterpainclinic.com.au
- Innervate Pain Management www.innervate.com.au
- Macquarie University Discipline of Physiotherapy www.mq.edu.au
- MedRN www.medrn.com.au
- Motor Accidents Insurance Board Tasmania www.maib.tas.gov.au
- Multiple Sclerosis Australia www.mssociety.com.au
- New Zealand Pain Society www.nzps.org.nz
- Pain Support.Org (formally Pain World) www.painsupport.org
- Palliative Care Queensland www.palliativecareqld.org.au
- Palliative Care Australia www.palliativecare.org.au
- Pain Interest Group Nursing Issues
- Paramedics Australasia Ltd www.paramedics.org.au
- Parkinsons Australia www.parkinsons.org.au
- Polio Australia www.polioaustralia.org.au
- Rehabilitation Counselling Association of Australasia www.rcaa.org.au
- RSI & Overuse Injury Association of the ACT Inc www.rsi.org.au
- Royal Australasian College of Surgeons www.surgeons.org
- Royal College of Nursing Australia www.rcna.org.au
- Royal Hobart Hospital www.dhhs.tas.gov.au
- Scenar Therapist Association Australasia Incoporated www.scenar.org.au
- Susan F Evans Pty Ltd www.drsusanevans.com
- St Vincents Hospital Brisbane www.stvincentsbrisbane.org.au
- The Pharmacy Guild of Australia www.guild.org.au
- The Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists www.ranzcog.edu.au
- Transplant Australia www.transplant.org.au
- Trauma Release Australia www.traumareleaseexercises.com.au
- UTS Chinese Medicine Society
- Wanda Cook & Associates Pty Ltd
- Workcover SA www.workcover.com


I'd survived the traumas of a major motor car accident, the ignominity of a prostatectomy, and the despair and exasperation of three separate cancers and their harsh therapies, but nothing had prepared me for the greatest challenge of my life, dealing with chronic pain
I had two major cycling accidents in the 1980s which caused a spinal fracture and severe whiplash.I quickly got over the accidents and was fine until the early 1990s when I started to have migraines. This gradually progressed to daily migraines by 1996.
My first taste of pain and injury was when I was only three years old.We had a car accident and I had my lower lumbar joints damaged as well as whiplash injuries to my neck. No one knew this at the time, though, and by the time I was nine I was having X-rays on my back to find out why I was in so much pain.
I was an advisory teacher when I suffered a spinal injury in 2007 that landed me in a Brisbane hospital emergency department.Thanks to a neurosurgeon, I regained the use of my left leg and the crushing pain eased.
I injured my neck in 1993 while attending a Scout Jamboree in Canada as a carer for a child with cerebral palsy.My pain symptoms didn't really show up until 1997 when I started getting lots of neck and arm pain.
As a chronic migraine sufferer I've lived with pain since I was a small child. With the help of sub-occipital electrodes and an implanted pulse generator (IPG implant) I can now manage my daily pain and rely less on heavy medications.
"Fortunately", the pain from my neck injury was so severe that it was taken seriously from the start.
My injury happened over two days – August 30-31, 2001 – when I was asked to reorganise the office's new filing system.
Before my accident, about six years ago, I worked at a prestige car dealership in Brisbane. This work was physically demanding as well as being quite social. We all had to get on well as it could be quite a pressured environment and humour often kept us going.
I woke up one morning in 1988 with a sore back.As the pain continued to increase, I consulted my general practitioner who referred me to an orthopedic surgeon. After some tests, I was told that there were no problems and that the pain should go away. It didn't.
That Friday in June 1990 began like any other Friday – two adults, three teenagers, family pets, all heading out. I was totally unaware that this was the day "Super Mum" would die and life as I knew it would be over.
September 23, 2006 was a beautiful, still, sunny autumn day.I was in the UK to visit my elderly mother and other family members and had taken the train to London to visit a friend.
It happened on 28 August 2008 at 8.28am. Everything after that is a bit of a blur, but the moment the accident happened will be stuck in my memory forever.
I first incurred a serious back injury at work in 1985. It was not able to be evidence-based for five years (at the time of surgery).
In 1962 at the age of 21, Renée was involved in a serious car accident that kept her in an English hospital - in a 40-bed geriatric ward - for nearly two years.

I was nine years old when I damaged the ligaments in my left leg in a hurdling accident.After a year of treatment my leg hadn't healed – in fact the pain had worsened and I was diagnosed with chronic regional pain syndrome.
It was during a long jump attempt at my school's athletics try-outs when I was nine that I first hurt myself.As usual, I ran and jumped but as I hit the sand I felt pain in what I thought was my ankle.
Harry Perkins, son of Olympic champion swimmer and Painaustralia Director Kieren Perkins OAM, was diagnosed with chronic migraine at the tender age of eleven.
My problems started in the early 1980s with the introduction of computers in most public service departments.In 1986,
Breast cancer is a diagnosis heard all too often these days at 13,000 diagnoses a year in Australia.

