
SPECIAL FORCES
SPECIAL FORCES
As a Green Beret, you’ve built a career around solving complex problems in unpredictable environments. Training cycles, deployments, partner-force missions, and irregular sleep patterns leave little room for personal medical care or long-term planning. Zero Nexxus is for Special Forces soldiers who want a structured, predictable transition plan that accounts for the injuries, exposures, and administrative realities of a career in special operations.
SF-Specific
Operational Hazards
Blast and overpressure exposure
breaching, indirect fire, rockets, and repeated use of shoulder-fired systems.
Sustained heavy kit and long-duration movements
chronic lumbar and cervical degeneration, hip/knee wear, ankle instability.
CQB, combatives, and force-on-force training
shoulder, wrist, hand, and rib injuries.
Static firing positions & optic use
migraines, eye strain, neck tension.
Airborne operations
spinal compression, knee trauma, repetitive-impact injuries.
Partner-force operations
with limited access to consistent medical care.
The Problem

Each 18-series MOS carries different operational stresses, and we tailor your transition plan to match the realities of your specific job
Documentation Gaps
Injuries handled internally by team medics or treated informally
Blast exposures not recorded
Limited imaging or follow-up
Chronic pain and sleep issues normalized
TBI symptoms minimized or unrecognized until late in career
Schools like SFAUC, SFARTAETC, Sniper, JM, Breacher, and Dive all carry their own physical and cognitive stressors, and the symptoms from each compound over a career.
This creates major gaps when it’s time for VA evaluation.
Chronic Allostatic Overload
(Operator Syndrome)
Years of deployments, irregular sleep, and constant readiness create the cumulative stress load associated with operator syndrome — fatigue, mood shifts, sleep disruption, hormonal changes, and cognitive slowdown.


The Solution
We build a transition plan tailored to the injury patterns, exposure history, and documentation gaps common across the Regiment.

YOU ONLY TRANSITION ONCE.
Most service members have never purchased a service like this — but they should.
“Most service members don’t realize how much money, time, and opportunity they lose during transition
until it’s already too late. We fix that.”




