Working in healthcare, especially EMS, doesn’t just challenge your mind, it chips away at your body’s health. From long hours on your feet, awkward lifts, repetitive movements, missed meals, broken sleep, and constant low-level stress, everything adds up. You might bounce back quickly and shrug these off early in your career. But years later, these normal aches can quietly turn into chronic pain, fatigue, or burnout that feels as physical as it does emotional.
Burnout often gets framed as a mental or emotional issue, but the body is actually deeply involved more than you think. This is because chronic stress keeps cortisol elevated, increases inflammation, disrupts sleep, and slows recovery.
Research even shows that healthcare workers experience higher rates of musculoskeletal injuries, sleep disorders, and cardiovascular risk factors compared to the general population, especially those working shifts or in physically demanding roles. Add long-term sleep disruption to the mix, and cortisol regulation can become impaired, further increasing cardiovascular risk.
The good news is that longevity in healthcare isn’t about avoiding hard work, but it’s about recovery. Think of your body like essential equipment – you wouldn’t skip maintenance on your rig or monitor and expect it to perform forever. Your body works the same way.
Taking care of yourself doesn’t have to mean extreme fitness plans or living at the gym. Strength training just two to three times a week can significantly reduce injury risk from lifting and repetitive strain. Even simple cardio helps too, and it doesn’t need to be intense or dramatic.
Walking, cycling, swimming, or even a short walk after a shift can help regulate stress hormones and improve circulation. Sometimes the best recovery move isn’t collapsing on the couch, but it’s a few minutes of movement to help your nervous system downshift.
Most importantly, pay attention to early warning signs. Lingering pain, constant exhaustion, irritability, or emotional numbness aren’t just “part of the job.” They’re signals. Addressing future problems early, whether through physical therapy, lifestyle adjustments, or mental health support, can preserve careers instead of shortening them.
A long, healthy career in healthcare isn’t built on endless grit. It’s built on respecting the physical cost of the work and choosing recovery on purpose. Take care of your body now, and it will keep showing up for you—shift after shift, year after year.
References:
Kırılmaz, M., Kılıç, T., Kılıç, S., et al. (2021). Impact of night shifts on sleeping patterns, psychosocial and physical health among healthcare workers. BMJ Open, 11(9), e046036
https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/11/9/e046036.
Silva, A., Sousa, H., Santos, J. V., et al. (2025). A systematic review of the association among sleep, cortisol level, and cardiovascular health in healthcare shift workers. Biomedicines, 13(10), 2539
https://www.mdpi.com/2227-9059/13/10/2539.
World Health Organization. (2019). Burn-out an “occupational phenomenon”: International classification of diseases (ICD-11)
https://www.who.int/news/item/28-05-2019-burn-out-an-occupational-phenomenon.
Written By: Francis Ilag