A Doctor's Guide to Recovering From Brain Injury at Home
A free on-demand session with Dr. Nitesh Kumar, MD, MBA, for patients, caregivers, and care teams navigating life after brain injury.
Press play to watch the session. You will learn how to think about the first 90 days, what to track at home, and how to decide whether Brain Revives is the right next step.
What you will learn:
- ✓ Why the standard follow-up gap leaves families without enough structure
- ✓ What to track during the first 30 days at home
- ✓ How sleep, fatigue, mood, and cognition interact after brain injury
- ✓ How caregivers can reduce chaos and support recovery without guessing
- ✓ When to call the doctor, when to wait, and how to prepare better questions
Dr. Nitesh Kumar, MD, MBA
Founder of Brain Revives. Certified Brain Injury Specialist. Physician executive focused on closing the post-discharge gap in brain injury recovery.
Dr. Kumar reviews each application before a consultation is offered.
What concussion recovery usually looks like
Most people recover from a concussion within about two weeks. For some, symptoms last longer. Knowing which path you are on, and tracking it, is exactly where structured support helps.
Frequently Asked Questions
- It is a free, on-demand video session with Dr. Nitesh Kumar, MD, MBA. It explains how to think about the first 90 days, what to track at home, and how to decide whether Brain Revives is the right next step for a patient or caregiver after brain injury.
- Patients recovering from traumatic brain injury, concussion, or stroke, the caregivers supporting them, and clinicians who want to understand the recovery framework. It is most useful for families navigating the gap between hospital discharge and structured follow-up.
- No. The training is educational and complements your medical team. It does not diagnose or treat, and it does not replace your physician, neurologist, or therapist. For new or worsening neurological symptoms, contact your clinician or call 911.
What is the free brain injury recovery training?
Who should watch the training?
Is the training a substitute for medical care?
Sources & further reading
- CDC, Traumatic Brain Injury & Concussion
- NIH NINDS, Traumatic Brain Injury
- American Stroke Association, About Stroke
- Dr. Nitesh Kumar, peer-reviewed publications (ORCID)
Brain Revives is educational and complements, but does not replace, care from a licensed clinician. In an emergency, call 911 or go to the nearest emergency department.