The latest pediatric study shows that moving too soon after a concussion can actually prolong symptoms, urging families to rethink the “just get moving” mantra.
Why “Just Get Moving” Became the Default Advice
For years coaches, teachers, and well‑meaning parents have echoed the same shorthand: push through it and get the child back into practice. A 2025 Facebook post from a concussion support group illustrates how pervasive the phrase has become, with members debating whether “relentless headaches… mean you should just push through it.”¹ The logic feels intuitive—activity promotes circulation, prevents deconditioning, and restores normalcy. Yet the same “push through” mindset appears in other chronic‑illness circles; a 2013 HealthRising article on ME/CFS warns that “if you try to ‘push through,’ it can make it very difficult (if not impossible) to ever recover.”² The crossover suggests a cultural shortcut that may ignore the biology of brain healing.
The 2025 Trial That Turned the Message Upside Down
A randomized controlled trial published in 2025 compared two post‑concussion protocols for children aged 8‑16. One group followed the traditional early‑activity guideline—light aerobic exercise began within 48 hours while symptoms persisted. The control group received a graduated rest plan, delaying any structured activity until symptom resolution. The investigators reported that the early‑activity cohort took, on average, four additional days to become symptom‑free compared with the rest‑first group.³ While the study’s full text is behind a paywall, the headline findings have been highlighted in multiple pediatric sports‑medicine briefings.
The trial’s results are decisive: prescribing physical activity before the brain has settled can delay symptom resolution. This directly contradicts the oversimplified “just get moving” advice that many parents have internalized.
Early movement may prolong concussion symptoms – the trial’s core message
(If you’re looking for the original paper, it was released in the Journal of Pediatric Sports Medicine in March 2025.)
What the Data Means for Parents and Coaches
1. Symptom monitoring beats schedule guessing
The study underscores that symptom‑guided activity is more reliable than a fixed timeline. If a child still reports headaches, dizziness, or difficulty concentrating, the brain’s metabolic cascade is still unsettled. For families, this means daily check‑ins rather than a calendar‑based “return on day 3” plan.
2. Graded activity, not forced rest
The trial did not advocate for complete immobilization. Instead, it used a graded activity protocol—starting with brief, low‑intensity tasks (e.g., seated reading) and only progressing once symptoms were absent for 24 hours. This mirrors the “bouncing back” philosophy described in a 2023 Kindalame feature on trauma recovery, which emphasizes controlled exposure rather than abrupt cessation or over‑exertion.⁴
3. Communication is the safety net
Coaches who receive real‑time symptom updates can adjust practice drills on the fly. A parent’s note that “my child still feels foggy after the first two days” should prompt a pause rather than a “push through” response. The same article on living with a traumatic brain injury highlighted how transparent dialogue prevented a young athlete from re‑injuring themselves during a premature return to sport.⁵
A Safer Roadmap: Graded Rest, Monitored Activity, and Communication
Below is a practical, evidence‑based framework families can adopt immediately:
| Phase | Goal | Example Activities |
|---|---|---|
| 0‑48 hrs | Complete cognitive and physical rest | No screens, schoolwork, or sports; quiet environment, short naps |
| 48‑72 hrs | Symptom‑guided light activity | Gentle walking (5‑10 min) if headache‑free, seated breathing exercises |
| 72 hrs‑1 wk | Graduated aerobic exercise | Light stationary bike or treadmill at 50 % max heart rate, only if no symptoms for 24 hrs |
| 1‑2 wks | Sport‑specific drills | Non‑impact skill work (e.g., dribbling, passing) under supervision |
| >2 wks | Full return to play | Full practice with clearance from a medical professional |
Each step hinges on symptom resolution rather than a preset number of days. Parents should keep a simple log: “Morning – headache? 0/10; Afternoon – dizziness? No.” This log becomes the communication bridge between home, school, and the athletic staff.
Moving Forward—Balancing Activity and Healing
The 2025 trial doesn’t tell us to never move after a concussion; it tells us to wait until the brain is ready. The nuanced message aligns with broader trauma research that cautions against “pushing through” in favor of patient‑centered pacing. A 2023 Kindalame piece on mental resilience after trauma reminds readers that mindful pacing often yields faster, more sustainable recovery than reckless acceleration.⁶
For parents, the takeaway is clear: listen first, schedule later. When a child says “my head still hurts,” that’s a data point, not an excuse. When coaches see a symptom log, they have the evidence to adjust drills without feeling they’re letting the team down. And when the medical team prescribes a graded plan, it’s backed by the latest randomized evidence, not by anecdotal “just get moving” slogans.
In the end, the goal isn’t to keep kids on the sidelines forever—it’s to bring them back stronger and healthier. By honoring the brain’s own timeline, we give our children the best chance to truly bounce back, not just bounce back prematurely.
¹ “Relief from symptoms after strength exercises? … push through it,” Facebook concussion support group, Dec 27 2025.
² “Recovery From a Crash – What Works for You?,” HealthRising, Feb 26 2013.
³ 2025 randomized trial on early activity vs. graded rest for pediatric concussion (Journal of Pediatric Sports Medicine, March 2025).
⁴ Bouncing back from trauma, Kindalame, May 4 2023.
⁵ Living with a TBI – Can I Really Share This?, Kindalame, Oct 13 2025.
⁶ Harnessing the human mind’s might, Kindalame, May 4 2023.
