Today’s Wounded Troops Are Tomorrow’s Chronic Pain Patients

By Crystal Lindell

This week Reuters reported that as many as 150 U.S.troops have been wounded so far in the War on Iran. Of those, eight were seriously injured.

That’s in addition to the 7 U.S. service members who have been killed in the conflict, which started less than two weeks ago.

Those numbers will continue to rise the longer the war drags on.

It can feel tempting to dismiss wounded soldiers as no big deal, and that’s how the Pentagon is framing it, saying the vast majority of injuries are minor and that 108 of the wounded had already returned to duty.

But many of those who get wounded in conflict zones will experience life-long symptoms, including chronic pain, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and traumatic brain ​injuries, which are common after exposure to blasts.

According to the National Institutes of Health, about two-thirds of U.S. veterans (65.6%) have  chronic pain, and one in ten (9.1%) live with severe chronic pain. 

Of course, it’s not just U.S. troops who are casualties in the war. Estimates vary, but about 1,200 Iranians have died, 28 Israelis and nearly 600 in Lebanon. The number of injured is well into the thousands.

Even if the war ends tomorrow, its effects will likely linger for generations. Living with chronic pain can impact your life until you die — and enduring it can impact everyone around you, including your children.

It can make you more short-tempered, less productive, and more depressed. It can make you harder to live with emotionally, and harder to live with logistically because you need extra care.

I doubt most of the wounded understand the ramifications. I don’t blame them. It’s almost impossible to understand chronic pain until you suffer through it yourself.

But as a chronic pain patient, I know what their future holds.

It’s years, even decades, of dealing with dismissive doctors; fighting for pain medication; and spending your days and nights in bed because it hurts too much to move.

I think, if they truly understood, many members of the military would tell you it’s not worth it.  

A recent report from the Department of Veterans Affairs found that 6,398 U.S. veterans died by suicide in 2023. While that’s down slightly from 2022, the veteran suicide rate actually increased to 35.2 deaths per 100,000 veterans. That’s about twice the suicide rate of civilians.

It averages out to over 17 suicides by veterans each day. Most of them probably suffered from chronic pain.

It’s easy to skim past headlines about the number of people wounded in the War on Iran. But for the people who are enduring it, and those who love them, nothing about their future will likely be easy.