From 1 April 2025, stroke survivors and carers across Hampshire and the Isle of Wight will have access to vital Life After Stroke support, thanks to a new funding agreement between NHS Hampshire and Isle of Wight and the Stroke Association.
This partnership ensures that once survivors have received acute care and rehabilitation, they can access dedicated support to help them regain independence, link them into NHS and other care and assistance they need, and reduce the risk of further strokes.
NHS Hampshire and Isle of Wight has commissioned the Stroke Association to offer this service across our region from 1 April 2025. This builds on the success of a support service which NHS Hampshire and Isle of Wight had already been funding with the Stroke Association in some parts of Hampshire.
It means stroke survivors across the whole of Hampshire and Isle of Wight will have access to support from the charity.
Garry Jopling, the charity’s Service Delivery Led for the Southwest and Channel Islands, said: “Thanks to the support of the local NHS, more than 3,500 people survive a stroke every year in Hampshire and the Isle of Wight, but surviving a stroke is just the start of a long and sometimes lifelong recovery journey. Our specialist teams support stroke survivors and their families to find the strength and determination they need to find their way back to life.
“We’re incredibly grateful that despite the extreme financial pressures facing the NHS they are prioritising the need for support. It ends the inequitable situation where stroke survivors in some areas are offered support while in others they’re not.
“We will be talking with local health teams across the Hampshire and the Isle of Wight to agree how the service should be tailored to meet the needs of each community in the longer term.”
Cheryl Harding-Trestrail, NHS Hampshire and Isle of Wight’s Head of Programme for Local Care, said: “NHS Hampshire and Isle of Wight recognises the value of supporting stroke survivors and carers and providing the long-term support they may need.
“The Stroke Association support will ensure that once survivors have received acute care and rehabilitation, they receive Life After Stroke care supporting their independence, linking them into NHS and other care and assistance they need, and helping to prevent the risk of them having further strokes.”
In Portsmouth, this means that a Life After Stroke Service will continue after funding from Portsmouth City Council ceases on 31 March.
On the Isle of Wight, it means a welcome return after the service stopped when funding from the Isle of Wight Council ended two years ago.
The news was applauded by 74-year-old islander Chris Messer who had backed the campaign to save the previous service in 2023.
Chris, a musician who lives in Winford, said: “This is marvellous news for anyone on the island who is unfortunate enough to have a stroke and need support. Someone will be there for them."
The Stroke Association helped Chris and his wife Joeley with information on his fatigue and headaches after stroke, his diabetes, problems with memory and thinking, as well as practical things such as driving after a stroke and where to go for help with benefits and financial assistance.
“The treatment that I received at St Mary’s Hospital in Newport was excellent but once I came home Joeley and I would have had real difficulty coping without the Stroke Association.
“You have a massive stroke, you go through the hospital and then you’re released and you’re on your own and you feel lost. You don’t know what the next step is without the Stroke Association.”
With its aging population, the number of people living with the lasting effects of stroke on the island is around 50 per cent higher than the national average.