Anonymous wrote:Lots of ways. You aren't getting a random sample of parents here.
My kid got his in soccer. He got headed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:After a concussion the child is not suppose to engage their brain (I know, not good for school!!) The brain needs to heal and should not be stimulated. OP, I hope you were told that.
I second this!
I was very dismissive of my friend's decision to fake home-school her son for 6 months one year until he returned to normal. Then I got a concussion myself (fell on the treadmill at gym!) It took about 6 months before I stopped feeling like I ws trying to swim through vasoline. I couldn't learn anything new. Got lost driving my normal commute route. Left the oven on more often than not.
Sidetracking… but if you do something like this, how does it work exactly? After the period of "homeschool" does the child just go back to school normally or does the child repeat the school year?
Anonymous wrote:A year? DS got concussion on Wed. Still has headache and can't seem to focus at all on homework. When did you decide to send kids back to school?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:After a concussion the child is not suppose to engage their brain (I know, not good for school!!) The brain needs to heal and should not be stimulated. OP, I hope you were told that.
I second this!
I was very dismissive of my friend's decision to fake home-school her son for 6 months one year until he returned to normal. Then I got a concussion myself (fell on the treadmill at gym!) It took about 6 months before I stopped feeling like I ws trying to swim through vasoline. I couldn't learn anything new. Got lost driving my normal commute route. Left the oven on more often than not.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Am glad to hear Children's is now taking concussions seriously. My child had a bad one five years ago--was unconscious for ten minutes--and went to Children's. After ascertaining there was no bleeding in the brain, they sent us on our way, with absolutely no advice or warnings. Children's could not have treated it more lightly--perhaps because it was not a sports related incident or perhaps because they simply weren't taking such injuries seriously then.
Child slept for 17 hours a night for several days, stayed home for a week (spring break). Midweek I took her to PCP who determined she was post-concussive. We then went through months of extremely erratic behavior that in retrospect was probably triggered by the concussion.
Did she recover completely?
Anonymous wrote:How are you kids getting these concussions?
Now I have a new thing to worry about. I had no idea!
Anonymous wrote:How are you kids getting these concussions?
Now I have a new thing to worry about. I had no idea!
Anonymous wrote:After a concussion the child is not suppose to engage their brain (I know, not good for school!!) The brain needs to heal and should not be stimulated. OP, I hope you were told that.
Anonymous wrote:Am glad to hear Children's is now taking concussions seriously. My child had a bad one five years ago--was unconscious for ten minutes--and went to Children's. After ascertaining there was no bleeding in the brain, they sent us on our way, with absolutely no advice or warnings. Children's could not have treated it more lightly--perhaps because it was not a sports related incident or perhaps because they simply weren't taking such injuries seriously then.
Child slept for 17 hours a night for several days, stayed home for a week (spring break). Midweek I took her to PCP who determined she was post-concussive. We then went through months of extremely erratic behavior that in retrospect was probably triggered by the concussion.