The American Heart Association’s Get With The Guidelines® – Stroke Rural Recognition Bronze award recognizes efforts to address the unique health needs of rural communities
BAR HARBOR, ME, July 1, 2026 – People who live in rural communities live an average of three years fewer than urban counterparts and have a 40% higher likelihood of developing heart disease and face a 30% increased risk for stroke mortality, according to an American Heart Association’s presidential advisory on rural health. Mount Desert Island Health (MDI Health) committed to changing that.
For its efforts to optimize stroke care and reduce gaps in rural health outcomes, Mount Desert Island Hospital (MDI Hospital) has received the American Heart Association’s Get With The Guidelines® – Stroke Rural Recognition Bronze award.
Stroke is the No. 4 cause of death and a leading cause of disability in the U.S, according to the American Heart Association’s 2026 Heart Disease and Stroke Statistics Report. A stroke occurs when a blood vessel supplying the brain is blocked by a clot or ruptures, preventing blood and oxygen from reaching brain tissue. When this happens, brain cells begin to die. Early detection and rapid treatment are critical to improving survival, minimizing disability and supporting faster recovery.
The American Heart Association recognizes the importance of health care services provided to people living in rural areas by rural hospitals that play a vital role in initiation of timely evidence-based care. For that reason, all rural hospitals participating in Get With The Guidelines – Stroke are eligible to receive award recognition based on a unique methodology focused on early acute stroke performance metrics.
“We are honored to receive this recognition, which reflects our team’s unwavering commitment to providing exceptional stroke care and readiness for our coastal communities,” said Chrissi Maguire, President and CEO of MDI Health. “Delivering specialized care in a rural setting comes with unique challenges, including longer transport times and limited resources, but our team works every day to ensure those obstacles never stand in the way of the high-quality care our patients deserve. This achievement is a testament to the dedication, expertise, and compassion of our clinicians, who remain focused on giving every stroke patient the best possible opportunity for recovery.”
This recognition goes to hospitals for their commitment to acute stroke care excellence, demonstrated through performance on guideline-directed measures including intravenous thrombolytic therapy, timely hospital inter-facility transfer, dysphagia screening, symptom timeline and deficit assessment documentation, emergency medical services communication, brain imaging and stroke expert consultation.
“Patients and health care professionals in the MDI region face unique health care challenges and opportunities,” said Karen E. Joynt Maddox, M.D., MPH, chair of the American Heart Association Quality Oversight Committee and co-author on the Association’s advisory on rural health. “MDI Hospital has advanced the important work of improving care for all Americans, regardless of where they live.”
About Get With The Guidelines®
Get With The Guidelines® is the American Heart Association/American Stroke Association’s hospital-based quality improvement program that provides hospitals with the latest research-based guidelines. Developed with the goal of saving lives and hastening recovery, Get With The Guidelines has touched the lives of more than 18 million patients since 2001. For more information, visit heart.org.


