Edward Mossman, Shore Medical Center's supervisor of material management, builds a simulated brain that will be used to teach children about strokes. (Photo courtesy of Shore Medical Center)
By DONALD WITTKOWSKI
Shore Medical Center in Somers Point is nationally recognized as a Primary Stroke Center, including 24-hour neurology and neurosurgery care and an emergency staff specially trained in the treatment of stroke patients.
At the same time, Shore is looking to enlist other “superheroes” who can recognize the symptoms of stroke and quickly take action to have stroke victims rushed to the hospital for emergency treatment.
Surprisingly, those heroes are children.
Shore is participating this month in a groundbreaking stroke education program, primarily aimed at children, that uses a kid-friendly superhero theme.
“We found out that there is a child-friendly stroke hero program. We decided that our month of October platform would be stroke awareness for children,” explained Sherri Richmond, Shore’s director of Emergency Services.
The focus of the program is to teach children how to recognize the symptoms of stroke in their parents or grandparents and to take action by calling 911.
“We want to give you some tools to be a stroke hero – when to call 911, when your loved one’s speech is slurred or there is weakness,” Richmond said of the children.
Richmond and other members of Shore’s staff will be attending two community Halloween events to begin showing children and adults, in a friendly, fun way, how to help their mom, dad or grandparents if they are having a stroke.
The first event will be the Somers Point Police Department Trunk or Treat celebration on Saturday, Oct. 22, from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. It will be held in the Shore Medical Center parking lot at the corner of Harbor Lane and Bay Avenue.
The second event will be the Ocean City Halloween Parade on Thursday, Oct. 27, from 7:15 p.m. to 8:15 p.m. The parade rolls down Asbury Avenue from Sixth Street to 11th Street.
“We are really getting more bang for our buck because we are able to educate the adults and children at one venue,” Richmond said of the two Halloween events.
Shore staffers will be dressed in “Brainiac” costumes to entertain the children. They will also hand out goodie bags filled with kid-friendly items, such as coloring books and crayons and toys shaped like miniature brains.
The Stroke Hero Packet will also include a kid-oriented stroke quiz that children will be able to take home. It will quiz them on the symptoms of stroke, what they should do if they see someone having a stroke and everyday things that can be done to prevent stroke.
The centerpiece of Shore’s display at both events will be an educational 4-foot-by-5-foot, three-dimensional simulated brain that will have about 500 lights on it. The faux brain was constructed by Edward Mossman, Shore’s supervisor of material management.
“This brain will mimic the actual human brain,” Richmond said. “We will put it in one of our vehicles and be able to disseminate the information visually in a fun teaching way. It will be something to engage the children on the functions of the brain.”
Sherri Richmond, Shore Medical Center’s director of Emergency Services, and Rob Schrevelius, Shore’s stroke coordinator, are overseeing the children’s outreach program for stroke awareness. They are standing in Shore’s children’s ward.