Coming soon
8:00am - 8:15am
8:20am - 8:35am
8:40am - 8:55am
9:00am - 9:15am
9:20am - 9:35am
Panel Discussion
9:40am - 10:10am
Break
10:10am - 10:30am
coming soon
10:30am - 10:45am
Relevance of rodent outcome measures (reflexive, operant, spontaneous) to acute pain conditions in humans - Alban Latremoliere, Johns Hopkins University
10:50am - 11:05am
Predictability of rodent pain models for acute pain analgesics in humans - Jim Eisenach, Wake Forest University
11:10am - 11:25am
Panel Discussion
11:30am - 12:00pm
Lunch (provided) with Breakout Session
Session 1: Changing landscape of food animal welfare in relation to pain relief and treating acute pain conditions - Brandon Reinbold, Elanco
12:00pm - 1:00pm
Translational Benefits (continued) - Moderated by Duncan Lascelles
1:00pm - 1:35pm
Ethical Implications of Pain Research - Adam Shriver, University of Oxford Centre for Practical Ethics
Swine work as translational for human development - Andrew Mannes, NIH Clinical Center
1:40pm - 1:55pm
NIH perspective on non-rodent models of acute pain - Michael Oshinsky, NINDS/NIH
2:00pm - 2:15pm
Translational value of acute pain in companion animals - Jim Eisenach, Wake Forest University
2:20pm - 2:35pm
Panel Discussion on translation
2:40pm - 3:00pm
Break
3:00pm - 3:20pm
Regulatory & Industry Perspective - Moderated by Michele Sharkey
USDA perspective on food animal analgesics for acute pain - Carol Clarke, USDA
3:20pm - 3:35pm
FDA/CVM veterinary acute pain approval process in companion animals - Lisa Troutman, FDA/CVM
3:40pm - 3:55pm
FDA/CVM veterinary acute pain subjective measurement in food animals - Emily Smith, FDA/CVM
4:00pm - 4:15pm
Corporate perspective on acute pain analgesics - Anne Malleau, Global Animal Partnership
4:20pm - 4:35pm
Panel Discussion
4:40pm - 5:00pm
Poster Session and Reception
5:00pm - 7:00pm