Abstract Background and aims High school students may be able to communicate health topics to peers and adults. Yet, few studies have evaluated the role of high school students in community health initiatives, making them underutilized for disseminating health information. We pilot tested stroke education across five high schools using varied delivery approaches as a preliminary step toward evaluating youth stroke education to improve community health. Methods In April-May 2025, five high schools in Connecticut and New York participated in stroke education. The format was designed to fit the needs of each school and included an 8-session classroom curriculum (Derby, CT), after-school club meetings (New Haven, CT; Long Island, NY), and one large assembly (Bridgeport, CT). Developed by teachers and neurology providers, the curriculum covered stroke risk factors, symptoms, and emergency response. Students completed a 15-point assessment adapted from the validated Stroke Action Test before, immediately after, and 4-6 weeks post-intervention. Results Of 112 students completing the pre-test, 99 (88%) completed the immediate post-test and 51 (46%) the delayed follow-up. Average scores rose from 47% pre-intervention to 75% post and 70% at 4-6 weeks. All schools scored 50% on pre-tests suggesting poor baseline stroke knowledge. Conclusions This pilot suggests that stroke education can be delivered to high school students across varied settings and may support knowledge gains up to 6 weeks. Limitations included small sample sizes and missing follow-up data. Future efforts will explore similarities and differences across larger sample sizes to draw stronger conclusions about the optimal format for efficiency and sustainability among schools. Conflict of interest nothing to disclose
Namian et al. (Fri,) studied this question.