biio. is an integrated multidisciplinary clinical service for patients with complex, overlapping, and often invisible illness. Our Neurological & Pain Processing Pathway supports patients with chronic pain syndromes, central sensitisation, neuropathic pain, fibromyalgia, and the pain phenotypes that sit at the intersection of hypermobility, dysautonomia and headache.
We are seeking a Pain Medicine Physician (FFPMANZCA or equivalent) with an interest in complex chronic pain to join our Neurological & Pain Processing Pathway as its specialist medical anchor for pain.
These patients have lived inside a fragmented pain story. Years of investigations that came back "unremarkable." Opioid trials offered and withdrawn without a plan. Told it was deconditioning, anxiety, or "just chronic pain" — language that closed conversations rather than opening them. They need a pain physician who can read central sensitisation alongside connective tissue, autonomic and neurological drivers, and who can build a plan that respects all of them.
Before each consultation, the work is done. Structured pain phenotype assessment, validated screening tools, medication history, prior interventional records and imaging — all collated in biio.'s integrated digital workspace, the biiography. You arrive at the consultation thinking about the patient, not assembling the file.
You'll work alongside biio.'s consultant neurologist, rheumatology team, psychology, physiotherapy, exercise physiology and our nurse practitioner team — the disciplines that make complex pain medicine sustainable. Care coordination and correspondence are handled by our support team.
Most uniquely, you will change lives here. Chronic pain patients lose years to fragmented care, polypharmacy and dismissal. A pain physician who can hold the full clinical picture doesn't just titrate a medication — they restore a person's belief that their pain can be understood, and that the next decade does not have to look like the last.
Engagement is via contractor agreement, with flexible sessional commitment and competitive remuneration reflecting the specialist nature of this work.