by Dr. Ashley Zucker on 2026-01-05

As we honor our veterans and their families this month, we also recognize that many veterans continue to struggle with their mental health and everyday life following their military service. Whether it’s related to complications with employment, maintaining healthy relationships, experiencing nightmares caused by Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), for many veterans, life is a daily challenge that warrants particular attention and support.

In one significant study of 60,000 Iraq and Afghanistan veterans, 13.5% of deployed and non-deployed veterans screened positive for PTSD, while other studies have shown the rate to be as high as 20-30%. In fact, as many as 500,000 U.S. troops who served in those wars may have been diagnosed with PTSD.

The impact trauma has on veterans can present in different ways, but there’s often a common denominator: They can experience significant challenges managing daily activities such as work, school or having healthy relationships. This can lead to social withdrawal, anxiety, shame, sleep disorders or even thoughts of suicide. Veterans with PTSD often experience triggers that equates to their nervous system becoming hijacked by a panic reaction, which can cause them to fight (get angry), flight (avoid) or freeze (feel numb).

Consider the following coping skills for veterans:

1. Grounding and relaxation techniques used to reduce anxiety and bring focus back to the present moment.

2. Emotional regulation helps manage anger, guilt, sadness or shame common in PTSD.

3. Cognitive coping strategies Focus on changing unhelpful or negative thought patterns.

4. Behavioral and lifestyle strategies support overall well-being and daily functioning.

5. Social and supportive coping reduces isolation and builds resilience.

6. Positive coping and meaning-making helps veterans reconnect with purpose and identity.

7. Crisis and safety planning for moments of high distress or suicidal thoughts.

If symptoms get worse or you feel your state of mental health is not improving, don't be afraid to talk to your doctor and ask for help. If you are in crisis, please call, text or chat with the Suicide and Crisis Lifeline at 988 or contact the text line by texting TALK to 741741. Support is a available.