Francis Joseph Keefe
Professor in Psychiatry and Behavioral SciencesOverview
I am Director of the Duke Pain Prevention and Treatment Research Program, an active NIH funded clinical research program focused on developing new and more effective ways of assessing and treating patients having acute and persistent pain. I have been active in nationally and internationally in shaping the pain research agenda. For the past 10 years I served as Editor in Chief of PAIN the premier journal in pain research. I also have served as the Chair of a number of NIH Study Sections. Finally, I was a member of the Institute of Medicine committee that published a report in 2011 (Relieving Pain in America: A Blueprint for Transforming Prevention, Care, Education, and Research) that has played a key role in shaping national policies in pain research and pain care.
Over my career, I have played a key role in the development of clinical pain services and pain research programs at Duke Medical Center. For over 20 years, I directed the Duke Pain Management Program and was a leader in the development of Duke Medical Center's multidisciplinary pain programs (both out-patient and in-patient.) I collaborate actively with investigators in other countries (e.g. United Kingdom, South Africa, China, and Australia).
Over the course of my career, I have collaborated closely with investigators both in and outside my lab. Together we have developed and refined a number of treatment protocols for persistent pain conditions (e.g. pain in patients with advanced cancer; sickle cell disease, and persistent joint pain due to osteo- and rheumatoid arthritis) including partner and caregiver-assisted pain coping skills training interventions. We have conducted a number of NIH- and foundation- funded randomized clinical trials testing the efficacy of these and other behavioral interventions (e.g. aerobic exercise protocols, yoga based interventions, mindfulness-based interventions, forgiveness-based interventions, loving kindness meditation, and emotional disclosure).
I currently serve as a Co-Investigator on a number of NIH grants, a number of which are funded by the HEAL Initiative. Many of these grants are testing novel strategies for delivering training in pain coping skills (e.g. video over internet, web-based training, virtual reality interventions, and apps for mobile devices). Along these lines, I collaborated with Dr. Chris Rini to develop an internet-based program for training in pain coping skills called painTRAINER (available at mypaintrainer.org). This program is free to any individuals or health professionals who wish to use it. I have a keen interest in exploring the efficacy of these and other strategies (e.g. training physical therapists, social workers, and nurses) promise to increase access to behavioral pain management interventions making them more widely available to the large population of patients and caregivers who might benefit from them.
I have published over 490 papers on topics ranging from pain coping strategies used during mammography to behavioral approaches to managing acute pain and pain at end of life. I have a longstanding interest in mentoring students and early career professionals interested in developing, testing, and disseminating novel protocols for managing pain, stress, and medical symptoms.
Positions
Professor in Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences in the School of Medicine
2000 School of Medicine
Professor in Psychology and Neuroscience in the Trinity College of Arts & Sciences
2011 Trinity College of Arts & Sciences
Professor in Medicine in the School of Medicine
2004 School of Medicine
Professor in Anesthesiology in the School of Medicine
2000 School of Medicine
Member of the Duke Cancer Institute in the School of Medicine
1978 School of Medicine
Education
B.A. 1971
1971 Bowdoin College
M.S. 1973
1973 Ohio University
Ph.D. 1975
1975 Ohio University
Publications, Grants & Awards
Offices & Contact
Durham, NC
Box 90399
Durham, NC
27708-0399