
Iowa Residents Report Some of the Highest Daily Pain Levels In America
If you read my recent article about Iowa’s Healthy Hometowns initiative, then you already know rural healthcare access has been a serious issue across the state. Iowa leaders are trying to improve local healthcare systems before more small-town clinics disappear, or the residents begin to stop taking care of themselves. Well, a recent nationwide survey shows exactly why that conversation matters so much right now.
READ MORE: How Will Iowa’s Healthy Hometowns Initiative Transform Rural Healthcare?
According to the data from Weiss & Paarz, Iowa residents report some of the highest daily pain levels in the entire country. In fact, Iowa ranked third nationwide for average daily pain, with residents reporting a "pain score" of 4.44 out of 10. By comparison, the national average sits much lower at 3.8. As a born and raised Iowan, that number doesn't shock me a whole lot, though.
If you've ever lived in a small town, worked physical labor, spent years farming, working construction, driving trucks, or standing on concrete floors all day, you already know the aches and pains that come with Iowa life. And seeing as I've done pretty much all of those things and then some, I am in a unique position to verify that our daily pain rate is likely higher than most. Sometimes the problem isn't the pain itself, but rather the fact that many of us simply try to "push through it" instead of getting treatment.

This study surveyed more than 2,400 Americans and found that 53% believe they live with chronic pain, but only 27% say they've actually received a formal diagnosis. That gap is pretty telling. We're either to stubborn, proud, or stupid: take your pick, because it's most likely affecting your quality of life.
We know healthcare isn't always easy to access for rural residents. Some people have to drive 30 minutes or more for just a yearly check-up. Others further delay treatment because of cost, scheduling, or because they assume the pain isn't "serious enough yet." As time passes, those originally small problems turn into much bigger ones.
Now avoiding healthcare is your own fault, but this next stat shocked me: about 42% of survey respondents said a medical professional had dismissed or minimized their pain concerns. That's a huge number, especially when over half of those same Americans surveyed say they're dealing with chronic pain in the first place.
This all ties directly back into the healthcare access conversation happening right now in Iowa. Whether these new Healthy Hometown programs actually fix the problem remains to be seen, but studies like this show why many people feel healthcare improvements can't come soon enough. Because for many Iowans, pain isn't just occasional discomfort; it's something people live with every. single. day.
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Gallery Credit: Stacker
