1 in 4.
On a Friday evening in 2023, those suddenly became Gillian Goldrich’s odds of returning to her old life. During dinner, Goldrich’s husband noticed that she was having trouble moving her spoon to her mouth.
“One minute, I was having dinner, I was perfectly fine,” Goldrich says. “Then my husband said, ‘You’re having a stroke, don’t move, I’m calling 911.’”
Goldrich, then 63 years old, was having an ischemic stroke—a clot had lodged in one of the primary arteries supplying blood flow to her brain. Within minutes, she had begun to exhibit the hallmark indicators of a stroke, often remembered using the mnemonic “Act F.A.S.T.”: Her face had begun to droop, her arm wasn’t functioning properly, and her speech became slurred and abnormal. The T is for “time” and the need to act immediately.
Goldrich had been in excellent health. She ate well and exercised regularly. Just months before the incident, she’d been told by a physician that her chances of having a stroke were 1.3%. Afterwards, her chances of returning to her pre-stroke function were 1 in 4.
Those odds may seem small, but they’re actually quite promising compared to what they would have been decades ago. If Goldrich had suffered her stroke even just 20 years earlier, she likely would have dealt with significant physical and mental impairments for the rest of her life.