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The start of a new year brings a familiar surge of motivation to move more, get stronger, and feel better. For people managing chronic pain, however, that motivation often collides with a harder question: is it actually safe to exercise? The instinct to protect a hurting body by moving less is understandable, but it runs counter to what the evidence consistently shows. In most cases, thoughtful, progressive movement is not just safe for chronic pain patients — it is one of the most powerful tools available for managing pain over the long term.
The challenge is knowing how to start without making things worse. At Oasis Orthopedic & Spine, we regularly support patients who are navigating low back pain and other spine and orthopedic conditions through the process of building activity back into their lives. The key is not willpower or ambition — it is structure, patience, and choosing the right movements for where your body actually is right now.
For years, rest was the default prescription for pain. That thinking has shifted substantially. A 2024 narrative review published by the National Center for Biotechnology Information found that physical exercise is an effective, low-cost, and safe therapeutic option for managing chronic musculoskeletal pain, with documented benefits not only for pain intensity but also for sleep quality, physical function, daily activities, and emotional wellbeing. The review emphasized that physical inactivity can actively aggravate chronic pain — meaning that avoidance of movement often perpetuates the very problem patients are trying to protect against.
The mechanism behind this is well established. Movement stimulates circulation to pain-sensitive tissues, reduces inflammatory markers, releases endogenous pain-modulating compounds, and gradually improves the strength and coordination of the muscles that support vulnerable joints and spinal structures. The goal is not to exercise through severe pain but to find a sustainable level of activity that challenges the body without triggering significant flare-ups.
One of the most common mistakes chronic pain patients make when starting a new exercise routine is measuring themselves against general fitness standards rather than their own baseline. A person managing osteoarthritis and joint pain should not begin January with the same program as a healthy adult returning to the gym after a holiday break. The starting point is wherever your body is today, and the goal is simply to do a little more than that — consistently.
In practical terms, this often means beginning with activities that minimize joint load and spinal compression while still producing meaningful cardiovascular and muscular benefits. The following are among the safest and most well-tolerated starting points for chronic pain patients:
Pacing is the practice of calibrating activity to avoid boom-and-bust cycles — pushing too hard on good days and then being forced to rest for several days afterward. For chronic pain patients, this pattern is one of the most significant obstacles to building consistent movement habits.
A better approach is to set a baseline level of activity that is achievable even on moderate pain days, and then increase it slowly and incrementally over weeks rather than days. The “10% rule” — increasing total weekly activity volume by no more than 10% per week — is a widely used guideline that applies well to chronic pain populations. Keeping a brief activity log can help you track trends and identify which activities or intensities tend to precede flare-ups, allowing for smarter adjustments over time.
Certain conditions warrant a more conservative approach to exercise initiation and should always be discussed with a spine or orthopedic specialist before starting. Patients managing active disc degeneration should avoid high-impact activities, heavy axial loading, and sustained flexion postures, particularly early in their program. Those with sciatica or nerve-related symptoms that worsen with activity should work with their care team to identify which movement patterns are safe and which may be aggravating an underlying compression. For any patient whose pain significantly worsens with exercise, evaluation before continuing is essential. Increased pain during activity is not always a reason to stop, but it warrants clinical context so you are not inadvertently progressing a structural problem.
Our non-surgical treatment options integrate movement-based care into a broader clinical plan that is tailored to each patient’s diagnosis, goals, and physical capacity — so exercise becomes part of the solution, not a source of additional frustration.
At Oasis Orthopedic & Spine, our team of specialists understands that living with chronic pain does not mean giving up on an active life. We serve patients throughout New Jersey with comprehensive spine and orthopedic care that treats both the structural source of pain and the functional limitations it creates. Whether you are starting from scratch after months of inactivity or looking to safely expand what you are already doing, we can help you build a movement plan that is realistic, safe, and grounded in your specific diagnosis.
A new year is a meaningful opportunity to invest in your long-term wellbeing. Request an appointment with Oasis Orthopedic & Spine today and take the first step toward moving better and feeling stronger in the months ahead.
The team at Oasis Orthopedic & Spine consists of experienced physicians and specialists providing comprehensive orthopedic and spine care across nine convenient locations throughout Northern New Jersey. Specializing in minimally invasive spine surgery, advanced orthopedic treatments, and pain management, our goal is to bring you the real-world clinical expertise and proven treatment approaches we use in our practice daily.