2019 Winston-Salem Heart and Stroke Walk

Life is why we walk.

Thanks to all our walkers, donors and volunteers who have accepted the challenge to help fight heart disease and stroke. We cannot achieve our mission without each one of you!

Join the American Heart Association for the 2019 Winston-Salem Heart and Stroke Walk on Sunday, September 29 at Wake Forest University BB&T Field. Sponsored by Wake Forest Baptist Health and MedCost, the festivities will begin at 1:30 p.m. and the walk begins at 3 p.m. Honor our local heart disease and stroke survivors during the Red & White Cap Ceremony, cheer for your favorite Mascot in the Mascot Dance-Off, enjoy the Kid Zone and live entertainment courtesy of The Liberty Street Band, get moving with the community walk, and bring your dogs dressed to impress for the Puparazzi Parade! This walk is stroller-friendly, and leashed dogs are welcome to join in on the fun! Bring your family, friends, neighbors, and co-workers to celebrate health successes in our community, learn how your family can live heart healthy, and help fight heart disease and stroke in Forsyth County. Visit www.winstonsalemheartwalk.org, email winstonsalemheartwalk@heart.org, or call (336)-542-4828 for more information.

Learn More HERE

Contact

Winston-Salem Heart & Stroke Walk Team

Email Winston-Salem Heart & Stroke Walk Team

336-469-0587

OUR MISSION:

Building healthier lives, free of cardiovascular diseases and stroke.

OUR IMPACT:

By 2020, to improve the cardiovascular health of all Americans by 20 percent while reducing deaths from cardiovascular disease and stroke by 20 percent.

We make an extraordinary impact through our wide range of lifesaving activities. Here’s how:

Improving patient care — Patients are why. We’re improving the quality of health care by creating best practices to treat heart disease and stroke. Our Get With The Guidelines hospital-based quality improvement program helps heart and stroke patients get the best treatment consistently. Mission: Lifeline helps patients with the most severe kind of heart attack get the specialized emergency services they need to survive.

Advocating for better health — Healthy communities are why. Our nationwide volunteer network, You’re The Cure, advocates for key issues at the national, state and local levels such as requiring physical education in schools, implementing clean air legislation and making AEDs mandatory in public buildings.

Reaching out to populations at risk — People of color are why. Blacks have higher risk and higher death rates from stroke than whites. Our Power To End Stroke education/awareness initiative helps African-Americans reduce their risk of stroke. More than 23,000 opinion leaders — including mayors, professors, ministers and celebrities — are Ambassadors for the program in their communities.

Raising awareness — Prevention is why. Heart disease is the No. 1 killer of women over age 25. But many women don’t make their health a priority. Through Go Red For Women, we’re raising awareness among women about their risks and empowering them to protect their heart health.

Protecting the future — Our nation’s children are why. Nearly one in three children and teens in the United States is overweight or obese. As a result, more kids than ever before are developing high blood pressure, high cholesterol and type 2 diabetes. We’re helping today’s children develop lifelong healthy habits so they can grow up to be tomorrow’s healthy adults.

Educating Americans — Awareness is why. We save lives every day by providing information and education. We pioneered CPR and millions of Americans use our patient education materials and online tools to help themselves and their loved ones live longer, healthier lives.


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