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Why More Firefighters Die From Stress Than Fire—and Why You’re at Risk, Too

When you imagine the most athletic "real men" who haven't spent their lives training for the NFL or the Olympics, there is a good chance you think of police officers, soldiers, or firefighters. Whether in combat or rushing through burning homes wearing between 45 and 75 pounds of gear, these men and women are some of the world’s most elite athletes, oftentimes without being recognized as such.

For firefighters in particular, the job requires conditioning well beyond a standard rucking workout. They must train to withstand smoke, toxins, disrupted sleep, and the cumulative stress of being always on call, a lifestyle that often leads to life-threatening cardiovascular disease down the line. Research even shows that cardiovascular disease kills more firefighters than fires do.

"When you’re young, you feel strong and think you’re built for this," says Mike Morlan, District Vice President with CAL FIRE Local 2881, who has been protecting his community in California for 24 years. "But when someone tells you the job you love might be what takes you out, not a fire, but your own heart or cancer, that’s hard to sit with. And the longer you’re in this career, the more real that truth becomes."

While not everyone is spending their days running through burning buildings, the toll of a high-stress career is remarkably universal. The body doesn’t always distinguish between the heat of a fire and the "heat" of a high-stakes professional life. Both trigger the same physiological exhaustion. In both worlds, the damage isn't always something you can see in the mirror.

Related: A Firefighter's Functional Fitness Plan for Real-World Strength

"A lot of that damage is cumulative and invisible," Morlan says. "You can be the strongest person on the crew and still have something developing inside you that no one has caught yet. That’s what makes this so dangerous; by the time it shows up, it’s often already serious."

This "invisible" risk is compounded by a stubborn cultural avoidance: many men wait for a crisis before they seek help. Data shows that 72% of men would literally rather clean a bathroom than sit in a doctor’s office. Instead of proactive maintenance, 65% of men admit they will wait as long as possible to seek help, even when dealing with persistent symptoms or an injury.

In a high-pressure environment, you can’t rely on how you feel or how fit you look. You need real data. "Every active man should get at least one comprehensive health screening that goes beyond a basic cholesterol panel. That should include advanced biomarkers and age-appropriate cancer screenings, including prostate screening. It gives you a real baseline and helps surface risks you won’t feel until it’s too late."

To bridge this gap, Morlan is partnering with Hundred Health, a system that treats high-stress professionals with the same data-driven rigor as the NFL. By pulling from 160 different lab markers, medical history, and wearable data, it builds a 100-day action plan for nutrition and exercise. It’s designed for any man in a high-pressure career who needs to see what’s happening under the hood before a "check engine" light actually comes on.

"This is the level of insight professional athletes get, and people in frontline, high-exposure careers deserve that same standard of care," he says. "We run into burning buildings so others can run out. Programs like this give us tools to protect ourselves, extend our careers, and stay healthy enough to be there for our families when the uniform comes off."

Related: These 5 Overlooked Symptoms Can Signal a Heart Attack, a Cardiologist Warns

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