Veterans and Chronic Pain: Understanding the Challenges

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Veterans and Chronic Pain: Understanding the Challenges

Did you know that Veterans are 2–3 times more likely to experience chronic pain than the general population? For women Veterans, they experience a higher rate of approximately 50%. For many Veterans, living with pain is not just a medical condition — it is part of daily life. The military’s mission-before-self culture often leads Veterans to push through severe pain to complete tasks that support their families, teams, or communities. While this dedication is a source of strength, it can also shape how Veterans experience and manage chronic pain.
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Introducing: The Veteran Engagement in Research Toolkit

Introducing: The Veteran Engagement in Research Toolkit Your one stop shop for everything you need to know about engaging Veterans in research. The Chronic Pain Centre of Excellence for Canadian Veterans (CPCoE) has released a new Veteran Engagement in Research Toolkit, developed in direct response to conversations with Veterans, families, researchers, clinicians, and others in the community. These consultations revealed a clear need for stronger cultural competence, connection, and mutual understanding between Veterans and research teams. This toolkit is designed to help address that gap. Whether you're a Principal Investigator, co-investigator, trainee, clinician, policymaker, Veteran Research Partner, or other knowledge user, this resource provides practical guidance and tools to support meaningful, effective Veteran engagement in research.Co-created with Veterans, the toolkit reflects their voices and lived experience.
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CPCoE at CIMVHR Forum 2025 — Advancing Research and Stories that Inspire

The Chronic Pain Centre of Excellence for Canadian Veterans (CPCoE) is proud to participate in CIMVHR Forum 2025, where our funded researchers will share powerful stories and groundbreaking research on chronic pain and Veterans’ health. Through film, qualitative and quantitative studies, and collaborative projects, our presenters will explore how chronic pain intersects with mental health, transition, and resilience. Each year, the CIMVHR Forum brings together thought leaders from across sectors to exchange ideas, foster collaboration, and showcase innovations in research that improve the lives of military personnel, Veterans, and their families.
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Understanding Veterans' Quality of Life: The Seven Domains of Well-Being

The seven domains of well-being, as defined by Veterans Affairs Canada, represent key areas that influence the overall quality of life for Canadian Veterans. Supporting Veterans across these domains helps ensure they can live healthy, meaningful, and fulfilling lives after service. The Chronic Pain Centre of Excellence for Canadian Veterans (CPCoE) is working with researchers to identify existing tools, scales, and questionnaires that measure Veteran well-being within each of the seven domains.
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Fourth Annual Military Veterans Alpine Challenge Highlights Chronic Pain and Resilience

The fourth annual Military Veteran Alpine Challenge (MVAC) has successfully concluded in Whistler. MVAC is more than just a hike through the mountains, it is a unique program that equips military veterans with tools to understand chronic pain, reframe the military mindset, and support a healthier transition to civilian life. Over the course of five months, participants engage in a comprehensive training and education program. Clinicians lead sessions on pain science, breathwork, strength training, sleep and pain management, and mindset, while veterans simultaneously work with their health teams to build the skills and resilience needed to prepare for the alpine hike.
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Serving Those Who Served: The Origins of the Chronic Pain Centre of Excellence for Canadian Veterans

When patients and colleagues ask me about the origins of the Chronic Pain Centre of Excellence for Canadian Veterans (“Centre of Excellence”), I start by telling them a story of an early patient of mine at the Michael G. DeGroote Pain Clinic.
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Morning Live with Annette Hamm

Veterans Derek Speirs and Marieanne Nyhuis join Annette Hamm on Hamilton’s Morning Live to discuss their experience with chronic pain and the launch of the Chronic Pain Centre of Excellence for Canadian Veterans.
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1010 Newstalk with Dave Trafford

Veteran Derek Speirs speaks with radio host Dave Trafford about his experience with chronic pain, and what the Centre of Excellence means to him.
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Ensuring Our Veterans Get Access to Care They Need

Over 40% of Canadian veterans experience chronic pain, but they often do not receive the proper care they deserve because the current healthcare system is not built to properly address the unique needs that veterans with chronic pain face, like mental illness and PTSD. Veterans also face many barriers to access care. Derek Speirs gives his perspective as a former Submariner in the Canadian Navy.
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Chronic Pain Centre for Veterans on CHCH

Next month, the Chronic Pain Centre of Excellence for Canadian Veterans launches at Hamilton’s McMaster University. Marie-Anne Nyhuis and Derek Speirs are two veterans who have benefited from research and treatment and they joined us this morning to tell us about what happened to them.
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Annals of Internal Medicine

Opioids are frequently prescribed for acute musculoskeletal injuries and may result in long-term use and consequent harms.
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Canadian Journal of Pain

This study presents evidence supporting the effectiveness of an interdisciplinary pain management program in addressing pain-related variables in Veterans and nonveterans and provides insight into how pain management is experienced differently by Veterans.
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Health Canada

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Canadian Journal of Pain

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