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Protecting Mental Health in Sport + Exercise 2025
PROMISE 2025 Delegate Ticket
£275.00 – £340.00 Select options This product has multiple variants. The options may be chosen on the product page
PROMISE Conference – Protecting Mental Health in Sport + Exercise Conference
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Brian Hainline, MD, is a neurologist who specializes in pain medicine and sports neurology. In addition to his clinical duties, he has assumed many roles in sport for the past 35 years, including setting the foundation for drug testing in sports through his groundbreaking book Drugs and the Athlete; working as ringside physician in boxing; and serving as Chief Medical Officer of the US Open Tennis Championships for 16 years. Brian has been an active voice in presenting sport as a public good: he was the NCAA’s first Chief Medical Officer from 2013 through May 2024. In this role, he reshaped the professional and amateur National Governing Body approach to sport, building a collaborative network that included sports medicine and scientific organizations, NCAA member schools, and the US Department of Defense. He is a leading international voice in both pain medicine and mental health in sport and co-chaired the International Olympic Committee summits that addressed these issues. Brian is a member of the Concussion in Sport Group and is coauthor of the 6th International Consensus Statement on Concussion in Sport. He is author/co-author of over 100 academic papers and book chapters, and co- editor of Sports Neurology – a comprehensive textbook that describes the interplay between sport and the nervous system. He is Clinical Professor of Neurology at NYU Grossman School of Medicine. Brian is Immediate Past President of the US Tennis Association, and Vice President of the International Tennis Federation.
Ron Maughan obtained his BSc (Physiology) and PhD from the University of Aberdeen, and was based in the Medical School there for almost 25 years before moving to England. He is now Visiting Professor in the School of Medicine at St Andrews University.
He spent much of his career trying to understand the physiological responses to exercise and the nature of fatigue, but has included many digressions along the way.
He chairs the Nutrition Working Group of the Medical Commission of the International Olympic Committee. He is a director of the IOC Diploma programs in Sports Nutrition, Sports Medicine, Sports Physical Therapies, Mental Health in Elite Sport and Drugs in Sport.
Dr Currie is founder and a former chair of the UK Royal College of Psychiatrists Sports Psychiatry Group. In 2019 he joined the International Olympic Committee mental health working group and was appointed to the Mental Health Expert Panel of the UK Sports Institute. He is former chair of the Scientific Committee of the International Society for Sports Psychiatry. He serves on TUE committees and is a psychiatric advisor to UK Anti-Doping (UKAD), the International Testing Agency (ITA) and the International Tennis Integrity Agency (ITIA). He is a psychiatrist in a specialist treatment and research centre in Newcastle and visiting professor at the University of Sunderland. His research interests include sports psychiatry, mood disorders, recovery and social inclusion. He has published extensively in all these areas including editing a highly commended handbook of Sports Psychiatry (2016) and a collection of Case Studies in Sports Psychiatry (2020).
Dr. Claudia Reardon holds an MD degree from the University of Wisconsin (USA) School of Medicine and Public Health, where she also completed psychiatry residency training. She is a Professor at the University of Wisconsin and serves as consulting sports psychiatrist for University of Wisconsin collegiate athletes. Dr. Reardon has served as Co-Chair of the International Olympic Committee’s Work Group on Mental Health in Elite Athletes and Co-Directs the IOC’s Diploma and Certificate Programs on Mental Health in Elite Sport. Dr. Reardon also has served on the International Society for Sports Psychiatry (ISSP) Board of Directors since 2010, currently serving as its Education Committee Chair, and on the National Football League’s Comprehensive Mental Health and Wellness Committee. She has published and presented widely on a number of sports psychiatry related topics and is Editor of the Book “Mental Health Care for Elite Athletes” and Co-Editor of the book “Clinical Sports Psychiatry: An International Perspective
Prof. dr. Vincent Gouttebarge is a former professional footballer who played 14 seasons in France and The Netherlands. He is Extraordinary Professor at the Section Sports Medicine of the University of Pretoria and based at the Orthopedic Surgery and Sports Medicine department of the Amsterdam University Medical Centers. He is also Medical Director at FIFPRO (Fédération Internationale des Associations de Footballeurs Professionnels). Prof. dr. Gouttebarge’s work focusses on a wide range of sports medicine domains being relevant in professional sports (emphasis on football), striving to protect and promote the physical, mental and social health of active and former professional athletes. He is Chair of the International Olympic Committee (IOC) Mental Health Working Group, co-Director of the IOC Programs on Mental Health in Elite Sport, member of the Heading Expert Group of the Fédération Internationale de Football Association (FIFA), member of the Medical Committee of the Union of European Football Associations (UEFA), member of the Medical Committee of the Confédération Africaine de Football (CAF), member of the Medical Expert Group of the French Professional Football League (LFP), member of the Concussion in Para Sport (CIPS) group, member of the Asian Football Confederation (AFC) Mental Health Working Group and member of the South African Sports Medicine Association (SASMA). Prof. dr. Gouttebarge is also member of the Editorial Board of the South African Journal of Sports Medicine.
Margo received her medical education and her family medicine training at McMaster University, Canada and her sports medicine specialty degree in Ottawa, Canada. Margo received her PhD from the VU University in Amsterdam. She held the role as Consultant and the Medical and Scientific Lead at the Health & Performance Centre at the University of Guelph where she focussed her practice on promoting elite athlete care and physical activity promotion in the general population. In addition, Margo has acted as the national team physician for Synchro Canada for 20 years as well as for the National Endurance Training Centre Athletes (middle- and long-distance track athletes) and the National Triathlon & Wrestling team training centres.
Margo is a Clinical Professor in the Faculty of Family Medicine in the Michael G. DeGroote School of Medicine, McMaster University, Canada where she is now the Dean of the Waterloo Regional Campus.
Margo is a member of the IOC Medical Commission’s Mental Health Working Group, which is mandated to produce evidence-based clinical tools, to inform the IOC on athlete mental health initiatives, and to provide knowledge translation advice on mental health interventions for sport stakeholders. Margo’s other area of research focus is on elite athlete health and well-being.