Anxiety disorders are among the most prevalent mental health conditions in the veteran population. While some degree of stress and worry is a normal part of life, anxiety disorders involve levels of fear, worry, and physiological arousal that are persistent, disproportionate to the situation, and significantly disruptive to functioning.
The most commonly claimed anxiety disorders among veterans include Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD), Panic Disorder, Social Anxiety Disorder, and specific phobias — though the VA rates all of these under the same General Rating Formula for Mental Disorders.
Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD)
GAD is characterized by excessive, difficult-to-control worry about a wide range of everyday concerns — health, finances, relationships, work, and safety. Veterans with GAD often describe feeling as though their mind never stops, that they are always waiting for something to go wrong. Physical symptoms such as muscle tension, headaches, gastrointestinal distress, and fatigue frequently accompany the psychological symptoms.
Panic Disorder
Panic disorder involves recurrent, unexpected panic attacks — sudden surges of intense fear accompanied by physical symptoms such as racing heart, shortness of breath, chest tightness, dizziness, and a sense of impending doom. Many veterans avoid situations where they fear a panic attack might occur, which can severely limit daily functioning.
Social Anxiety Disorder
Veterans with social anxiety experience intense fear of situations involving scrutiny or judgment by others. This can manifest as avoidance of group gatherings, difficulty maintaining employment in social settings, and withdrawal from family and community. Social anxiety is sometimes mistaken for introversion or personal preference when it is actually a clinically significant condition causing real impairment.
Anxiety and Service Connection
Anxiety disorders can be directly service-connected when they develop in response to identifiable stressors during military service, or secondarily service-connected when they arise from or are worsened by an existing service-connected condition. An independent evaluation that clearly documents the diagnosis, its functional impact, and the connection to service provides a strong evidentiary foundation for a VA claim.