FRIDAY, Oct. 22 (HealthDay News) -- You might have seen J.R.
Martinez on ABC's
All My Children, where he plays an Iraq War vet with severe burns across much of his body who led his fiancée to believe he was dead rather than reveal his injuries.
Martinez, 27, earned the right to play that role the hard way,
to say the least.
In 2003, just a month into his first Iraq deployment as a
real-life Army soldier, his Humvee hit a land mine. The explosion
caused severe burns to 40 percent of Martinez's body.
Throughout his grueling recovery, which included 32 surgeries,
Martinez used his experience to lift the spirits of other military
vets recovering from injuries and to raise awareness about the
difficulties -- physical, social and emotional -- burn survivors
face.
Martinez will speak on Saturday at the Phoenix Society for Burn
Survivors World Burn Congress in Galveston, Texas. The Phoenix
Society works to prevent burn injuries and improve care for burn
survivors.
"I know my scars are a powerful tool," Martinez said. "When I walk into a room, people are going to look at me. I use that attention to speak to them and educate them about my world, the burn survivor world."
Martinez was a 19-year-old high school grad in Dalton, Ga. when
he enlisted. He went to basic training at Fort Benning and in March
2003, was sent to Iraq.
The April 5 explosion caused the Humvee to burst into flames.
Trapped inside, Martinez remembers screaming for someone to let him
out. "You can see people running around, but no one is coming to
get you," Martinez said. "You feel like you're in a lost
place."
His last memory was of being on the ground, held by his
sergeant. Then he passed out.
Martinez was flown to Kuwait, then Germany and Brooke Army
Medical Center in San Antonio. The hospital is home to the U.S.
Army Institute of Surgical Research Burn Center, where some 900
seriously burned military vets have been treated since the start of
the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, said Col. Evan Renz, M.D., a burn
surgeon and director of the burn center.
When Martinez awoke after three weeks, his mother was at his
side. He had lost parts of his ears. He had fractures in his face,
arm, leg and rib; and his lungs were damaged from inhaling smoke
and debris.
"My mother is unbelievable," Martinez said. "She's the best tool I have to chisel away at life. If there is an iceberg in front of me, she's the one I can count on to help me knock that iceberg down."
Renz met Martinez that summer. Martinez never complained, Renz
said.
"He is one of the finest human beings I've ever met," Renz said. "Since the war began, we have been privileged to meet over 900 men injured in the line of duty, not exactly like J.R. but in similar ways. We are continuously astounded by their spirit and the fact they can overcome such devastating injuries, and not only overcome it, but do really well."
Burns can be terribly painful, and so is the treatment. Surgeons
often use skin grafts, in which a 0.25 millimeter-thick layer of
skin from an unburned portion of the body is removed and placed
over the burned area. "Most patients say the donor site hurts worse
than the burned site," Renz said.
And as it heals, the skin tightens and needs to be stretched,
which also hurts. Even when it heals, grafted skin is more
delicate, prone to injury and itching.
"A burn injury is a lifelong injury. It never really goes away," Renz said. "There is nothing about a burn wound that is easy or simple. It's all problems and it's all painful."
For Martinez, even as he began to heal physically, emotionally
he was devastated. Most comfortable at the burn ward where everyone
knew and accepted him, Martinez began hanging around there, running
errands and helping out.
One sunny day, a nurse asked Martinez to check in on another
young veteran who'd been severely burned. The man had the lights
off and the blinds closed. Martinez sat next to him. "I wasn't
trying to be therapeutic or anything, we just talked," Martinez
said.
When he left, he noticed the man had opened the blinds. "By
being able to talk to other guys going through something similar,
it was helping them and ultimately helping me," he said.
Martinez continued to work with recovering vets, had become a
spokesman for the Coalition to Salute America's Heroes and had been
featured on
Oprah when the ABC casting call went out for a real-life
veteran to play an injured vet.
Nowadays, Martinez is living in Los Angeles, working with an
acting coach and thrilled to be pursuing acting as a career.
"Being on the show is so important to me personally, but it's bigger than me," Martinez said. "It encourages those burn survivors out there in the world to say, 'He did it. We can face the world and people will love us, too.' After a while, people don't see the scars anymore. All they see is, 'Oh, that's J.R.' That's a beautiful thing. It's diminishing that gap between burn survivors and the rest of the world, for us to start understanding one another."
More information
The
Phoenix
Society for Burn Survivors has more.