Editorial Board:
Professor Anna Spacek (Department of Anaesthesia, University of Wien, Austria)
Dr Bjorn Meyerson (Department of Neurosurgery, Karolinska University Hospital, Sweden)
Professor Brett Stacey (Oregon Health Science University, USA)
Dr Daniel B Carr (Departments of Anaesthesia and Medicine, New England Medical Center, USA)
Professor Eldon Tunks (McMaster University, Canada)
Professor Felix S Linetsky (Dept of Anatomy, College of Medicine, University of South Florida, USA)
Professor Harold Merskey (Department of Psychiatry, University of Western Ontario, Canada)
Professor Jae Chol Shim (School of Medicine, Hanyang University, Seoul, Korea)
Professor Magdi R Iskander (National Cancer Institute, Cairo University, Egypt)
Professor Michael Zenz (BG-Kliniken Bergmannshell, Germany)
Professor Nortin M Hadler (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, USA)
Dr Robert van Sventer (Pain Management and Research, Amphia Hospital, Breda, Netherlands)
Professor Shulamith Kreitler (Department of Psychology, Tel Aviv University, Israel)
Dr William Raffaeli (Pain Unit and Palliative Care, Infermi Hospital, Rimini, Italy)
Professor Winston Parris (Professor of Anaesthesiology, Duke University, USA)
This journal ceased publication with Volume 19 Number 6 (2007). For questions about subscriptions paid for later volumes please contact subscriptions@maney.co.uk. For enquiries about papers published in, or submitted to, the journal please contact Rosie Sheridan. The online version of the journal will remain in place at http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/maney/tpc
The Pain Clinic provides a forum in which pain clinicians can exchange new ideas and experiences and communicate on diagnosis and treatment. The journal's multidisciplinary nature is refelected by its international editorial board, which includes experts from several different fields; bridging the gap between many different specialised areas of medicine.
The Pain Clinic focuses on the clinical methods used and the problems involved in the diagnosis and treatment of persistent and recurrent types of pain. The main areas of interest include: palliative care, pharmacology, pain management, psychology of pain, diagnosis & treatment, and anatomy.