
Every August, parents across Northern Virginia scramble to check one item off their back-to-school list: the sports physical.
It gets booked quickly, completed in a rush, and filed away without much thought. And honestly, that is understandable. When you have tryouts in two weeks and a school form sitting on the kitchen counter, the goal is clearance, not a deep conversation.
But here is what most families do not realize: a sports physical done well is one of the most valuable health visits your active child can have. And when it is done by the team that already knows your child, it is something else entirely.
At KidsWatch Pediatrics in Falls Church, we want to change how families in Northern Virginia think about sports physicals. Not as a box to check. As a real conversation about your child’s health, their sport, their history, and what it takes to keep them doing what they love.
A pre-participation physical examination (PPE) is a medical evaluation required by most schools before a student can participate in organized sports. In Virginia, schools require this documentation before the season begins.
The purpose is straightforward: make sure your child is healthy enough to safely participate in athletic activity, and identify any conditions that might put them at increased risk during competition or practice.
Before your child’s appointment, bring your school or league’s sports physical form. Most schools and athletic programs require a specific form to be completed and signed by a provider, and having it with you at the visit keeps things moving quickly.
If you do not have the form yet, that is okay too. We can also provide standard clearance documentation that most programs accept.
Medical History Review
This is where the most important information lives. Before we ever lay a stethoscope on your child, we review their full health history. At KidsWatch, if your child is already a patient, we are not starting from scratch. We already know their history.
We ask about:
| Why continuity matters When your KidsWatch provider does your child’s sports physical, they are not reading your child’s chart for the first time. They already know about the ankle that was sprained two springs ago. They know about the exercise-induced asthma that presented during a school run last year. That continuity is not just convenient. It is clinically valuable. |
After the history review, we move to the hands-on exam. As Dr. Dhaliwal puts it, this is a quick exam, and most visits are less than 30 minutes from start to finish.
Once the history and exam are complete, your child is cleared and game day ready, or if anything needs a closer look, we will walk you through the next steps right away.
Being held from sports is not as common as parents fear, but it does happen. The most common reasons include:
Being held is not a punishment. It is a safeguard. Our goal is always to get your child back to their sport as safely and as quickly as possible.
Parents often ask whether a sports physical can replace an annual well visit. The short answer is: it cannot, and it should not.
A sports physical is focused specifically on athletic clearance. It goes deeper on cardiac history, musculoskeletal function, and sport-specific considerations. But it does not cover everything a well visit does.
| Sports Physical Cardiac screening Musculoskeletal assessment Sport-specific injury review Athletic clearance documentation | Well Visit Developmental screening Vaccine review Mental health assessment Nutrition, sleep, full wellness |
Your child needs both. At KidsWatch, we can provide both with the same team that knows your child’s complete history.
Coming prepared makes the appointment faster, more thorough, and more useful.
Bring With You
Think Through These Before the Appointment
| What to expect A typical sports physical at KidsWatch takes less than 30 minutes. Established patients move even faster since their history is already in our system. You will leave with clearance documentation or, if further evaluation is needed, a clear next step and timeline. |
This is the single most common mistake families make. Sports physical slots fill up rapidly in July and August as back-to-school season hits. If your child’s season starts in late August or early September, schedule now rather than waiting until the week before tryouts.
If further evaluation is needed with cardiac findings or injury concerns, you want time to complete that process without it interfering with the start of the season.
Schedule today, or walk in and get game day ready. It protects your child’s ability to participate on day one.
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