
Yannick Gilanyi
@yannickgilanyi
PhD Candidate Neura/UNSW. Accredited Exercise Physiologist. Outdoors enthusiast.
ID: 1430127234342285318
24-08-2021 11:18:28
40 Tweet
105 Followers
108 Following


On Monday 13 May, join researchers Dr. Anastasia Shavrova š·ļø (she/her), Yannick Gilanyi, Indrani Mukherjee and @seedysarah as they look on the bright side with their series: āItās not all bad! The other side of negative emotions and environmentsā pintofscience.com.au/event/its-not-ā¦



Very proud of this publication. Barriers and enablers to exercise adherence in people with nonspecific chronic low back #pain: a systematic review of #qualitative evidence. PAIN Journal Centre for Pain IMPACT doi.org/10.1097/j.painā¦


Had a great time presenting my research to people at the UNSW Science and Pint of Science AU event! Here are links to my research if you're interested: doi.org/10.1016/j.jpai⦠doi.org/10.1097/j.painā¦




Fantastic presentation on understanding disparity and inequity: a critical approach to pain through the lens of racism. So much helpful and practical research to improve our world Anna M Hood PhD Dr. Star Booker, PhD, RN Vani Mathur IASP Centre for Pain IMPACT #WC2024


Excited for this afternoon's session, keen to learn more about trial methods from experts David Hohenschurz Dr Felicity Braithwaite Prof Manuela Ferreira IASP #WC2024




James McAuley Discussing the experience of phantom limb pain. Excited to be working on the TITAN trial, the worldās largest clinical trial for phantom limb pain, exploring innovative, drug-free treatments! #PhantomLimbPain #TITANTrial #NeuRA

New open access paper in The Journal of Pain We make a Call to Action to the Pain Research community to make changes to enhance and ensure the trustworthiness of pain research sciencedirect.com/science/articl⦠. THREAD 1/16



Fascinating talk by James McAuley overviewing the evidence based treatments for low back pain. The takeaways: 1. We have enough trials for exercise 2. We have evidence based treatments, we just need them implementwe 3. Promising new treatments provide sustained benefit #AusPainSoc


š¢New study finds higher exercise adherence is associated with greater reductions in pain & disability in chronic low back pain - but differences are small.š¢ Free full text: doi.org/10.1016/j.jphy⦠Matt Jones Harrison Hansford Mitch Gibbs, PhD Yannick Gilanyi Exeter Med School Jill Hayden



š„Which fact sheet helps most in #BackPain consultations? šIn an RCT with 1080 patients, a nondirective sheet listing options beat a traditional advice sheet for decision-making preparedness. James McAuley Rodrigo Rizzo Michael Ferraro Institute for Musculoskeletal Health jamanetwork.com/journals/jamanā¦