Herald on Sunday

Cruising on after stroke at sea

Quick reactions meant quick recovery from collapse — and now a new holiday.

- By Brittany Keogh

ATauranga couple will be hoping for less drama when they board a cruise ship in November, a year after their dream holiday ended in a chopper ride to hospital after a stroke.

Rex and Sheryl Farrow were three days into a cruise from Sydney to Perth when Rex’s hand went numb. At first Sheryl thought her husband, a fit and healthy 85-yearold, had just leaned on a nerve and tried rubbing his hand. But it didn’t get better.

“He said, ‘My arm feels a bit funny’, and I looked at him and one side of his mouth was just ever so slightly drooped,” she told the Herald on Sunday.

She had seen an ad on TV about the signs of a stroke — including arm weakness, facial drooping and slurred speech — and she knew she needed to get Rex help immediatel­y.

“I don’t think anybody else would have picked it up but we’ve been married for over 50 years and I said to him, ‘We need help now’.”

Sheryl told crew her husband was having a stroke and they rushed Rex to the Sun Princess’s onboard hospital. By the time they arrived — about 10 minutes after the stroke’s onset — his speech had started to slur.

There, doctors gave Rex medication to dissolve a suspected clot and called in a rescue helicopter to evacuate him to Townsville Hospital. The ship didn’t have a landing pad so paramedics winched Rex — barefoot and dressed only in a shirt and shorts, with a metal cage to

● About 9000 people have a stroke in New Zealand every year

● Fifteen per cent of people who have a stroke are institutio­nalised because of disabiliti­es; another 2500 die

● In 2009 data, strokes cost New Zealand more than $450 million ● Authoritie­s estimate strokes could be halved, with lifestyle changes

FAST stroke symptoms Face drooping

Arm weakness

Speech difficulty

Time to call 111

protect his face in case he hit the skids — to the helicopter as it hovered above the ship.

The day after the dramatic rescue Sheryl got off the ship at the next port in Cairns and flew to Townsville to be at her husband’s bedside.

“The staff [on the ship] were absolutely brilliant. I could not fault them. They booked all the flights, motel and everything,” she said.

Rex spent five days in hospital for tests and observatio­n and made an “absolutely, totally, full recovery”.

The couple refused to let the experience spoil their trip, and once the doctor gave Rex the all clear they flew to Darwin and got back on the Sun Princess.

Rex said he and his GP credited his amazing recovery to his wife’s quick thinking.

The experience hasn’t put the Farrows off. In November they will spend the anniversar­y of Rex’s stroke on another cruise, this time travelling around New Zealand.

“He’s not allowed to do the same trick this time,” Sheryl said. “I’ve told him.”

The couple were thankful they had travel insurance and Rex’s stroke highlighte­d its importance.

Rex said although he was a little upset about his stroke at first, he later realised how lucky he was.

“A cousin of mine had a stroke at a similar time and his stroke was much worse because he didn’t get to medical [help] as quickly as I did.”

Stroke Foundation chief executive Mark Vivian said the sooner someone got medical attention the better because treatment reduced damage to the brain — and some treatments were time specific.

“[Time] can be the difference between a life time of disability, and a full recovery.”

He said learning the symptoms of a stroke — known by the abbreviati­on “FAST” — was important.

“It takes a minute to learn, but it could make a lifetime of difference.”

HWatch the video at nzherald.co.nz

 ?? Alan Gibson ?? Sheryl and Rex Farrow are off to sea again.
Alan Gibson Sheryl and Rex Farrow are off to sea again.
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