Angels Stroke Heroes : Inspiring the Global Stroke Community

Dr Sheila believes in you

19 min · 30. mar. 2026
episode Dr Sheila believes in you cover

Beskrivelse

Prof Sheila Martins is founder and president of the Brazilian Stroke Network, Neurology Professor at Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, Coordinator of the Stroke Programme at Hospital de Clínicas de Porto Alegre, and Chief of Neurology and Neurosurgery Service at Hospital Moinhos de Vento (a private hospital affiliated to Johns Hopkins Institute).   In 2008, as advisor of the Ministry of Health, she started the organisation of the National Stroke Programme and has since dedicated herself to developing policy, building stroke units, and organising stroke systems not only in Brazil but around the world.  She launched a WSO certification campaign for stroke centers in Latin America in 2021, expanding it to other developing counties after she assumed the WSO presidency in 2022.  Prof Sheila is admired and adored by a generation of young stroke doctors whom she inspires and influences to change stroke care in their own hospitals and countries.   In this episode of the Angels Stroke Heroes podcast, she talks about the importance of taking opportunities when they’re offered, about changing her mind about becoming an engineer, and about what drives her to continue working around the world to change outcomes for stroke patients.    In this episode   * Inspiring young doctors in Latin America  * The importance of hearing ‘you can do it’  * The opportunity that changed everything  * Not becoming an engineer  * The beauty of changing patient outcomes  * Making a difference in the world  * Working with the World Stroke Organization  * The love of dance, cinema and friends  Find out more about the Angels Initiative: www.angels-initiative.com

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Alle episoder

15 episoder

episode In the right place at the right time cover

In the right place at the right time

In a conversation recorded in Maastricht during ESOC 2026, Latvian neurologist Kristaps Jurjāns explains how consistency earned Pauls Stradins Clinical University Hospital in Riga more diamond awards than any other hospital in the world.   He says, “Mostly what gives us these awards is that we do it consistently. We do not drop our standards and our data shows this. I can trust everybody that works in our hospital with the stroke patients to provide acute care at the highest level.”  He describes missing the cut to become an orthopedic surgeon, following his mom into neurology, just temporarily, and then forgetting all about surgery as he learned about stroke neurology from his mentor Professor Evija Miglāne.   It’s “inevitability” that drives him, he says. “If I drop this, who's gonna pick it up? That’s the first question. And the next question is, so if somebody does, am I happy about it? If not, then you have to do it yourself.  Finally, Kristaps explains how working out with a boxing coach eases the transition from hospital to the  Jurjāns household which is currently occupied by three small boys including two-year-old twins.     In this episode:  * Cycling from Brussels to Maastricht  * Getting an award for getting an award  * Why consistency matters  * “You have to rise or somebody dies”  * Choosing neurology (or not)  * Having doctors in the family  * Raising boys  * Getting in the ring  * “What else should I be doing?”  Find out more about the Angels Initiative: www.angels-initiative.com

30. juni 202620 min
episode All the world’s a stage cover

All the world’s a stage

In this episode recorded in Maastricht during ESOC 2026, Italian neurologist Professor Danilo Toni reflects on three decades of stroke care transformation in Italy. He describes a flourishing relationship between Angels and the Italian Stroke Association (of which he is a past president), the genius of the data activation program MonitorISA, and the Trojan Horse strategy that paved the way for the proliferation of stroke units in Italy.  He recalls his role in the ECASS trials that fundamentally transformed stroke care, and outlines the most urgent questions that remain unanswered.  A passionate actor who is currently playing King Lear in an offbeat amateur production, he shares his views on the benefits of being on stage:  “Thanks to theater, you can show your emotion without any limitation, without any judgment, not your personal judgment toward yourself, nor the one toward the others ... It’s the best thing I could do for myself. And I always say it is better than any benzodiazepine and any anti-anxiety treatment and antidepressant treatment. And I definitely suggest to everyone should do it.”    In this episode: * First encounter with Angels  * The genius of MonitorISA  * Dramatic changes for stroke neurology in Italy  * Benefits of stroke unit care  * A Trojan Horse strategy  * Becoming a doctor and choosing neurology  * The focus on ICH  * Past trials and urgent unmet needs  * The gratitude of patients and their families  * The benefits of theatre  Find out more about the Angels Initiative: www.angels-initiative.com

16. juni 202628 min
episode A decade of Angels cover

A decade of Angels

The Angels Initiative is 10 years old. In a special birthday edition of the Angels Stroke Heroes podcast, we talk to project lead and cofounder Jan van der Merwe about a decade of Angels, the organization he and Thomas Fischer brought to life in May 2016.   Ten years later, the Angels Initiative has reached every goal, and exceeded every target.   It is estimated that more than 50 million stroke patients will receive evidence-based care in Angels hospitals by 2030.  With over 300,000 registered users on the Angels website, it is the world’s largest stroke community, a truly global movement that spans multiple continents including Europe, Africa, Asia, and Latin America. Over 200,000 courses have been completed in our online learning platform, the Angels Academy. World-wide, more than 9,000 hospitals and 1,000 prehospital teams have met the standard for hospital and EMS awards.   The target of 1,500 hospitals by December 2019 was reached in 2018, and the number of registered Angels hospitals now exceeds 10,000. The Angels-supported schools-based awareness program, FAST Heroes, has reached more than one million children and two million grandparents. And the strategy to convert 1000 Angels Regions by December 2027 overshot its target earlier this year.  We asked Jan about the tragic event that became a trigger for an extraordinary intervention in stroke care, about the strategic model that underpins the organization, and about doing things for the right reasons.   In this episode:   * God’s plan & doing things for the right reasons  * The devastating moment that led to the launch of Angels  * A multi-platform behavior change strategy  * Insights about complexity and time  * The real meaning of awards  * The power of communities  * A shocking experience that further shaped his understanding of the mission  * ‘They need not wait to see what others do’  * The next 10 years  Find out more about the Angels Initiative: www.angels-initiative.com

5. maj 202641 min
episode ICH care bundle – a call to action cover

ICH care bundle – a call to action

Evidence that a combination of actions performed together can reduce death and disability in intracerebral haemorrhagic stroke (ICH) was a call to action for the Angels Initiative to devise a set of tools that supports and standardizes implementation.     That task fell to Madeline Bucher and Ines Carvalho who, in this episode of the Angels Stroke Heroes podcast, join us to tell the story of designing a checklist for change.    Intracerebral haemorrhage is the most serious and least treatable form of stroke. And while the past three to four decades saw great strides in the treatment of acute ischemic stroke, the fate of ICH patients remained largely unchanged, until the conclusion of studies such as the INTERACT3 clinical research project in 2023. INTERACT3 showed that timely administration of a care bundle that included lowering of systolic blood pressure, strict glucose control, treatment of fever, and rapid reversal of anticoagulation led to less disability, lower rates of death, and better overall quality of life.     During ESOC 2025, INTERACT3 lead investigator and WSO president-elect Prof Craig Anderson made the case for the care bundle in a panel discussion with Professors Pachi Moniche and Robert Mikulik that was initiated and recorded by Angels.     This discussion was the starting point for Madeline and Inês after they accepted a brief to create standardized tools to support the implementation of the ICH care bundle in hospitals.    In this episode  * A call to action  * What was in the brief  * A multi-platform strategy  * Scripting the critical moves  * Ask the experts  * The five platforms in action  * More science, please  Find out more about the Angels Initiative: www.angels-initiative.com

31. mar. 202616 min
episode Dr Sheila believes in you cover

Dr Sheila believes in you

Prof Sheila Martins is founder and president of the Brazilian Stroke Network, Neurology Professor at Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, Coordinator of the Stroke Programme at Hospital de Clínicas de Porto Alegre, and Chief of Neurology and Neurosurgery Service at Hospital Moinhos de Vento (a private hospital affiliated to Johns Hopkins Institute).   In 2008, as advisor of the Ministry of Health, she started the organisation of the National Stroke Programme and has since dedicated herself to developing policy, building stroke units, and organising stroke systems not only in Brazil but around the world.  She launched a WSO certification campaign for stroke centers in Latin America in 2021, expanding it to other developing counties after she assumed the WSO presidency in 2022.  Prof Sheila is admired and adored by a generation of young stroke doctors whom she inspires and influences to change stroke care in their own hospitals and countries.   In this episode of the Angels Stroke Heroes podcast, she talks about the importance of taking opportunities when they’re offered, about changing her mind about becoming an engineer, and about what drives her to continue working around the world to change outcomes for stroke patients.    In this episode   * Inspiring young doctors in Latin America  * The importance of hearing ‘you can do it’  * The opportunity that changed everything  * Not becoming an engineer  * The beauty of changing patient outcomes  * Making a difference in the world  * Working with the World Stroke Organization  * The love of dance, cinema and friends  Find out more about the Angels Initiative: www.angels-initiative.com

30. mar. 202619 min