Marking World Stroke Day today, hospitals across the city organised awareness campaigns.
"Each year more women suffer from stroke than men, and they are unaware of the primary symptoms and about the risk factors associated with it.
"Hence, women need to be educated and empowered to take charge of their health so that they not only know how to reduce their risk of suffering stroke, but can also recognise the warning signs," Rupak Barua, CEO of AMRI Hospitals, said.
Some studies pin stroke as the third most common cause for female mortality in the world.
Dr Dipesh Kumar Mondal, president of the Stroke Foundation of Bengal, said although stroke is preventable in more than 80 per cent of cases, it is increasing alarmingly due to lack of awareness in all sections of people.
Dr Haseeb Hassan, consultant neurologist at Rabindranath Tagore Institute of Cardiac Sciences, said stroke is the third most common cause of death in the world.
Every sixth person in the world can get affected by stroke anytime in their lives, the doctors said adding, it carries a high mortality rate to the tune of up to 41 per cent in the first one month.
