They say the show must go on, and there are a handful of country music stars living up to that as 2026 gets underway.
Because, despite having to manage some serious health issues, many of the following stars are still showing up fo the stage to put on a show for their fans.
The following is a quick look at country music stars who have shared their health battles with fans as the new year gets underway:
PAUL CAUTHEN
Paul Cauthen stunned the country music world in 2025 when he announced that he had been diagnosed with cancer, and just a few weeks later he delivered another shocker.
The 40-year-old singer took to social media to announce that he was not going to treat his cancer via traditional methods but was instead opting for a holistic approach. Cauthen later opened up about exactly what he is doing to treat his thyroid cancer as well as how he thinks things are going during an appearance on the “Ten Year Town” podcast with Troy Cartwright.
“Going good,” Cauthen said. “Whipping cancer’s ass. It’s going great. I’ve been taking a bunch of supplements. Taking ivermectin, fenbendazole and methylene blue. All these things not a lot of people talk about instead of doing the general way of having your whole endocrine system ripped out of your throat.”
Cauthen then touched on some formerly in his circle being against him taking a holistic approach.
“I went a different way,” he said. “So, it has been … a lot of people shunned me for it. A lot of people have gotten a lot of flack. I’ve stopped working with people because of this situation. It’s been weird. You want to actually make a call for your own body, and people want to make calls for your body for you. That was the first time I ever had that feeling. I guess getting cancer is one of those things that kind of opened up who the real people are in your life that are in it for you and your health and your journey back to your most wanted health. Instead of playing psychological games and trying to tell you what to do and have you do this and do that, and you need to be like that, and we have the answers.
“Everybody can tell you what they believe, but you gotta go find it out for yourself.”
Cauthen said that he has always been “as a stubborn as a mule.”
“It’s wild. It’s scary,” he said. “I took a tougher road in the end. I’d already be healed up, but there’s a chance I could have lost my voice. There’s you know, I could have been unstable in my calcium and my levels could be, I could feel like I have a weighted blanket on me every day and be fatigued, chronic fatigue. Maybe me sex drive goes down. There’s so many things that can happen when you pull this organ out of your body. It takes you years to get stable on supplements, and you’re married to supplements the rest of your life. So, I’m taking a crapload of supplements now, and I’ve lost 25 pounds, and I believe that in the end I can say that cancer really saved my life because it stopped a lot of my bad habits.
“I was eating double cheeseburgers at 4 a.m. on the bus,” Cauthen said. “I haven’t had bread in a long time or beer really. I have a different outlook. So, in the end, I think in the long game, me getting healthy and taking this path of health and wellness and eating clean is going to save me.
“Give me longevity.”
Cauthen still seems to be doing pretty good, and he and his wife recently announced they are expecting a child in 2026.
MARK CHESNUTT
Mark Chesnutt had a rough couple of months in 2024, and that is probably putting it lightly because the country music star very nearly lost his life last June.
The 62-year-old was rushed into emergency surgery where he underwent quadruple bypass surgery. It sounds serious because it is, but Chesnutt is apparently one, tough dude because he made it back pretty quickly and was already touring by the end of 2024.
However, he again was hospitalized on Oct. 16, 2025, before he was slated to open for the group, Alabama.
His publicist, Don Murry Grubbs, told Countrynow.com that doctors discovered that Chesnutt had a “low sodium count” and “very high blood pressure.”
JOHN DRISKELL HOPKINS
Zac Brown Band bass guitarist John Driskell Hopkins announced that he had been diagnosed with ALS about three years ago, and he is still out there battling the disease.
In an interview with Fox in 2024, he revealed how he came to suspect that something was wrong, and how he finally got his diagnosis.
“I told the guys back in 2019 that there was something wrong with me,” he said. “Like, before COVID my bluegrass hand was, you know, this hand was doing great and this hand was slowing down.
“And all throughout COVID, I played gigs in Cul-de-sacs and private homes and back porches, and I noticed a little bit, but it wasn’t until we got back out in the fall of ‘21 that I really noticed changes above and beyond me just not being able to keep up with bluegrass. It was more like, I was laughing on stage, and my legs were locking up.”
Driskell Hopkins said that at first they thought the issue was caused from the new statin drugs that he started for cholesterol.
“Then we thought, ‘Could it be some sort of head injury?’” he said. “And, you know, I never played football really. I knocked my head around a little bit, but nothing crazy. It wasn’t until two neurologists missed it that we landed on the third and got the diagnosis.”
ASHLEY COOKE
Ashley Cooke’s health revelation in 2025 had her fans sending prayers and well-wishes.
The 28-year-old made the revelation on a TikTok video. She mentioned that she was having a career year, and she did indeed find success, but … man, she really had a rough run of health-related news. That included her dropping in the nugget about a diagnosis of her own.
Cooke provided more information on that in an interview with Taste of Country.
“It’s a genetic thing called Brugada syndrome,” she told the site. “A lot of my family members have passed away unexpectedly, very healthy and very young, from it. So it’s very scary.”
The Mayo Clinic says that Brugada syndrome is “a rare but potentially life-threatening heart rhythm condition that is sometimes inherited.”
It adds that people with Brugada syndrome have “an increased risk of irregular heart rhythms beginning in the lower chambers of the heart (ventricles). This disease can cause an abnormal rhythm in the heart’s lower chambers, leading to ventricular fibrillation (v-fib) and sudden cardiac death, often occurring while at rest or asleep.”
Cooke told Taste of Country she underwent multiple EKGs to get to the diagnosis and is working with a cardiologist to try to find out more about her condition.
“The crazy part is, it doesn’t really impact anything about my daily life,” she said. “That’s the scary part about Brugada syndrome. It just feels like a ghost around you. Because there’s no warning signs, no symptoms. It’s just one of those things where all of a sudden one day, this certain thing in your heart can just stop, and you’re just gone.
“It’s terrifying,” she added. “It doesn’t impact anything that I do, or how I function, until one day, it maybe just could.”
COLT FORD
Colt Ford died twice after collapsing following a show in 2024.
Obviously, doctors were able to bring him back both times, and he is already back out there touring and making music.
He revealed some of the details of what happened in 2024 when he called in to the Big D and Bubba radio show.
“It’s been a traumatic, crazy experience,” Ford told the hosts. “I didn’t even remember coming out here to do a show in Phoenix.”
Ford had just stepped back onto his tour bus after performing at Dierks Bentley’s Whiskey Row bar when he texted his fiancée, ‘Hi baby.’”
“And then I fell over dead,” he said.
Ford said that, luckily, his band came out to check on him and found him. And, he said, country music star Brantley Gilbert got involved in getting him to the hospital and, eventually, making sure he was switched to another hospital when the one they were at didn’t have the correct equipment to deal with Ford’s heart situation.
“He said, ‘I don’t care what you do, get him to the other hospital,’” Ford said of Gilbert.
Ford said he died during transport to the other hospital.
“They brought me back,” he said. “They saved my life. The Lord had more for me to do.”
He added that one of his doctors told him he would not have given him a 1-percent chance to live.
“He said, I would give you a .1 percent chance that you would have survived,’” Ford said.
“I had so much trauma in my body and my heart,” he said. “I had three stints put in (my heart).”
Ford toured the country in 2025 and seems to be doing much better.
ALAN JACKSON
Alan Jackson will go down as one of the greatest country music stars of all-time when all is said and done.
The icon retired in 2025 from touring — he is planning one final farewell show for June 2026 — and there were multiple reasons for that.
One reason is that he has been battling with a rare genetic condition alled Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease. It is a chronic neuropathy condition that affects a person’s balance and ability to walk, and it apparently runs in his family.
“Most of my fans know I have a degenerative health condition that affects my legs and arms and my mobility that I got from my daddy and it’s getting worse,” he said. “So, it makes me more uncomfortable on stage, and I just have a hard time, and I just want to think about maybe calling it quits before I’m unable to do the job like I want to.”
RONNIE MCDOWELL
Country music icon Ronnie McDowell had a medical scare while playing at a music festival in Pennsylvania in 2025, but it didn’t keep him down long.
The 75-year-old Navy veteran is one tough dude, and we know that because he was quickly back out walking and playing shows.
“Hi folks!” McDowell said in a video he shared to Facebook while he was getting a workout in. “Yep, I had a stroke. I gotta get all this plaque cleared out here in my jugular, but you know what? I’m walking. Yep. I’m doing my two-mile walk.”
McDowell suffered the medical scare while playing at the Summer Solstice Music Festival in Oley, Pennsylvania. McDowell began slurring his words onstage when his son, Ronnie Dean McDowell Jr., stepped in.
“I knew something wasn’t right as I had his vocals in my in ear monitor and I could hear him slurring his words and forgetting the words to his songs that he has sang for many years,” Ronnie Dean wrote on Facebook. “After a few minutes I had Steve to play a solo while I took my dad off side stage to ask him how he was feeling. He told me that he wasn’t OK, and that’s not how my strong Dad talks. He said that he thought he might be having a stroke.”
McDowell Jr. said he immediately took his dad to a van to cool off and asked the promoter to bring over the EMT.
“They took him to the Reading hospital,” he said. “I will say this, that every single person at the hospital was so incredibly nice and helpful. The Doctors told him that he will need surgery in the next few weeks. They do want him to take it easy, but they said that he can perform and workout in the next few days.”
McDowell began his career in 1977 and charted more than 30 songs in the top 40 on the Billboard country music charts. Two of those songs — “Older Woman” and “You’re Gonna Ruin My Bad Reputation” — each reached the top spot on the charts. McDowell had 11 more songs hit the top 10.
He was also known for his song about Elvis Presley’s death in 1977, called “The King Is Gone,” which became a country and pop hit.
CARLY PEARCE
Country music star Carly Pearce opened up more about the frightening heart condition she revealed last year during an appearance on “Today” in early 2025.
The 34-year-old singer revealed in 2024 that she was dealing with pericarditis, which is the inflammation of the tissue surrounding the heart, according to the Mayo Clinic.
“I had a really debilitating chest pain that was only relieved if I bent over like this (leaning forward), and that’s a classic symptom of pericarditis,” she reportedly said. “And then when you lay back, it gets way worse because that wall is kind of inflamed around your heart.”
She said she also had “a really intense shortness of breath … almost having to suck through a straw.”
While she just revealed the issue in 2024, Pearce reportedly said it is something she has actually been dealing with for nearly five years.
“I’m doing better,” she said. “I’m healthy. I’m trying to find my new normal. I have what’s called recurrent pericarditis. I’ve had several flares since 2020.”
Pearce also has a history of heart issues in her family, per Fox, with her father surviving a widowmaker heart attack when she was 19.
She told “Today” that she leaned on her father and his experience with heart issues in dealing with her own.
“Just for the help through the anxiety that comes with, ‘Oh my gosh, I’m having a chest pain, am I OK, am I OK?‘” she said. “It’s been really helpful to have somebody in your family that can really help you with those things.”
RICHARD STERBAN
Oak Ridge Boys member Richard Sterben shocked fans in late September 2025 when he announced that he is battling pancreatic cancer.
Sterban has been a member of the legendary group for 53 years.
“In March of (2025), I was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer,” Sterban said in an announcement. “But I am under the care of the best cancer doctors in the country and, with the help of the Good Lord above, I believe I will be able to get through this.”
“I want to thank everyone, especially the fans, for your concern, and I would appreciate your continued prayers,” he added. “Most days I’m feeling very good, and I hope to be back out on the road in several months.”
RAY STEVENS
The country music world has been praying for legendary singer Ray Stevens since he revealed that he was hospitalized in Nashville after a heart attack back on July 4.
And fans recently good some good news as the 86-year-old Country Music Hall of Famer continues his recovery.
“Ray Stevens is pleased to share that his recovery from the heart attack he suffered in July is progressing very positively,” a post to Stevens X account read. “He is doing well following the live-saving procedures that took place earlier this year. Stevens remains upbeat and active, now back working full-time in his recording studio as he regains strength and continues forward with confidence.”
The statement included a quote from Stevens that read, “I’m trying to get strong enough to continue performing, but in the meantime, I’ve got a lot of work I want to do in the recording studio, so I intend to focus my attention there for now.”
Stevens actually announced heading into 2025 that he planned retire, but he backtracked on that before suffering the heart attack.
The announcement on X provided an exciting note for fans about his studio work.
“With renewed energy and a creative spark driving him, Stevens is preparing for the release of his forthcoming single, ‘Savannah,’ which will be available via Curb Records on February 12, 2026,” it read. “Stevens remains optimistic as health and strength continue to build.”
Stevens was admitted to the hospital back on July 4 after complaining of chest pain. A heart catheterization found that he had a heart attack. He then underwent surgery to correct issues that led to the heart attack.
The comedic songwriter and singer has been performing since 1957.
Stevens was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame in 2019. He is also a member of the Grand Ole Opry, the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame, the Georgia Music Hall of Fame and the Christian Music Hall of Fame.
RANDY TRAVIS
Randy Travis lost his ability to sing following a massive stroke back in 2013, but the country music icon has found a way to still entertain and has been out touring.
And in 2025 we learned that Travis nearly lost a whole lot more than his singing ability back when his medical emergency took place.
His wife, Mary, revealed in an interview with Fox News Digital that doctors told her that she should “pull the plug” on him while he was out.
“I think Randy, there was never a doubt in Randy’s mind that he could make it through it,” she said. “It was that magical moment that I went to his bedside when they said, ‘We need to pull the plug. He’s got too many things going against him at that point.’ He had gotten a staph infection and three other hospital-born bacterial viruses like Serratia, Pseudomonas, one things after another, and the doctors were just saying, ‘He just doesn’t have the strength to get through this.’”
But Mary said that when doctors told her to say goodbye to her husband, he gave her a sign.
“That was the moment that I knew that Randy Travis was gonna make it because he squeezed my hand a tear went down his face,” she told Fox. “And I said, ‘He’s still fighting.’”
The 66-year-old made it, and he made headlines in 2024 after he found a way to use AI to continue to make music.
It has been a remarkable recovery because CBS News reported that Travis was given just a 2% chance of survival following his stroke.
Travis was actually on the road making some tour dates in 2025.
CLAY WALKER
Country music star Clay Walker has been open with fans about his long battle with multiple sclerosis, and in a new interview with People Magazine he has revealed that he has had a tough year dealing with the disease.
Walker, 56, made headlines in 2025 when he was forced to cancel a show in Hot Springs, Arkansas to undergo a procedure to help his battle against MS.
“At the beginning of the year, I noticed I was having a lot of difficulty with balance and walking, and it really started to worry me,” Walker told People. “I knew I had to do something.”
The outlet reported that Walker’s procedure was to implant a baclofen pump. People said that device delivers “the anti-spasticity medication baclofen directly into the spinal fluid.”
“The surgery gave me a lot of hope,” Walker told People. “But so far, you know, it’s not great. It hasn’t done what I wanted it to. Balance has been an issue lately.
“Am I walking perfect? No.” Walker added. “Am I walking better? Absolutely. I got on a treadmill the other day without a harness holding me up to keep me from falling, and I walked five minutes. That’s progress.”
While it’s not perfect, Walker admitted to People that when he was first diagnosed with the disease back in 1996, the outlook was “horrific.”
“I was told that I wouldn’t be around very long and that I’d be in a wheelchair and that I would be dead pretty quick because of the amount of lesions that I had on my spinal cord and brainstem and brain,” he said.
That has given Walker some amazing perspective.
“We turned everything upside down,” he told People. “We already won the battle, you know? We’ve got that to celebrate.”
Still, Walker told People that he is “going through a rough patch right now.”
“Does it bother me that people have to watch me struggle to get off stage?” Walker said. “Yes, I does. But my band is very in tune with me, and they know if I’m struggling or not. All it takes is a glance. They are always there, especially my bass player (Curt Walsh). I’m like, ‘Dude, if you see me falling, fall in front of me so I don’t get hurt.”