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			 U.S. Army soldiers who were the most pessimistic were 35 percent 
			more likely to report new back pain, joint pain or frequent 
			headaches after returning from deployment compared with those who 
			were the most optimistic, the study team reports in JAMA Network 
			Open. 
 "We found that optimism was protective for soldiers even when they 
			were exposed to combat or having personal injury during deployment 
			combat," said the study's lead author Afton Hassett, an associate 
			research scientist in the department of anesthesiology at the 
			University of Michigan in Ann Arbor.
 
 "The most surprising thing was that even after we took into 
			consideration demographic factors such as education, marital status 
			and whether the soldier was an officer or an enlisted man, the 
			effects of optimism were still powerful."
 
 While optimism may seem like an innate trait, it can be modified 
			with the right therapies, Hassett said.
 
			
			 
			
 "We don't want to blame people for not being optimistic enough," she 
			added. "But maybe we need to think about identifying soldiers who 
			have low levels of optimism and perhaps help them with some 
			pre-deployment programs."
 
 People who view the world negatively can be taught to have a more 
			optimistic view through cognitive behavioral therapy, Hassett said. 
			"Often pessimism is born of negative false beliefs," she explained. 
			"If you can counter those beliefs - which are often related to how 
			someone was raised - people can be motivated to think a little 
			differently."
 
 Hassett and colleagues analyzed data from 20,734 U.S. Army soldiers, 
			37 percent of whom reported pain in at least one new area of the 
			body after deployment. All had filled out questionnaires prior to 
			deployment that assessed levels of optimism through responses on a 
			five-point scale indicating how strongly a soldier agreed with four 
			statements: "In uncertain times, I usually expect the best," "I 
			rarely count on good things happening to me," "Overall, I expect 
			more good things to happen to me than bad" and "If something can go 
			wrong for me, it will."
 
 Soldiers who were already suffering from some sort of chronic pain 
			before they were deployed were excluded from the analysis.
 
			
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			The researchers were also able to include information on the level 
			of combat intensity experienced by the soldiers, along with five 
			potentially traumatic events during deployment: encountering dead 
			bodies or seeing people killed or wounded, feeling in great danger 
			of being killed, engaging in direct combat that involved discharging 
			a weapon, experiencing a blast or explosion and experiencing a 
			vehicular crash.
 After deployment, 25 percent of the soldiers reported new back pain, 
			24 percent reported new joint pain and 12 percent reported new 
			frequent headaches.
 
 While the new study looked only at the development of chronic pain 
			in the military, "this is not isolated to soldiers," Hassett said. 
			"There are many experimental studies suggesting a very strong link 
			between optimism and pain."
 
 Dr. John Hache can see the broader implications of the new findings.
 
 "It's a pretty interesting study," said Hache, a clinical assistant 
			professor with the Pain Medicine Program at the University of 
			Pittsburgh Medical Center in Pennsylvania. "One of the things we're 
			trying to sort out is how we can manage the huge chronic pain 
			epidemic especially in the setting of the opioid epidemic. What's 
			really interesting is, they have identified something new that may 
			be modifiable. Most of the other risk factors identified in the 
			paper are things you can't change, such as being in a stressful 
			combat position."
 
 The study suggests it might be possible to protect against chronic 
			pain conditions, said Hache, who was not involved in the new 
			research. "Addressing certain psychological aspects before someone 
			is exposed to military service might prevent them from developing 
			pain in the first place."
 
 SOURCE: https://bit.ly/2GsyRTn JAMA Network Open, online February 8, 
			2019.
 
 (This story adds dropped words "37 percent of whom" in paragraph 8.)
 
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