- Emilia Clarke suffered two brain aneurysms during early Game of Thrones filming
- She highlighted the lack of adequate aftercare for brain injury survivors
- Brain injury symptoms often include physical, cognitive, emotional, and linguistic issues
Actress Emilia Clarke, who suffered brain aneurysms in 2011 and 2013, has reflected on how difficult it is for survivors of the terrifying health scares.
Speaking at Variety's Power of Women London, she said: "When I finally shared my story in 2019, we were overwhelmed by the response. Mostly young people reached out to tell us their own stories. Today we have tens of thousands of survivors in our community saying essentially the same thing.
Emilia Clarke suffered from two life-threatening brain aneurysms and subarachnoid hemorrhages in 2011 and 2013, during the filming of the early seasons of Game of Thrones.
"The journey to healing feels like falling off the edge of a cliff without anyone there to catch you," she added.
The Game of Thrones star said that treatments around brain injuries needs to improve, particularly with aftercare, reports femalefirst.co.uk.
She said, "What usually happens when you're rushed to hospital with a brain injury is that doctors do everything possible to save your life. They stop the bleeding, remove the clot, find the source, cut it out, stitch you up, and send you home."
"But what many people don't realise is that whatever symptoms remain — physical, cognitive, emotional, linguistic — the consequence is unresolved trauma."
The actress added that there are simply too few "neuropsychologists and specialist rehabilitation services for that reality to change without a major shift in priorities".
Clarke compares the current outlook on brain injuries to where cancer was a century ago in terms of how people approach the rehab.
The actress said, "When everyone around you thinks you look fine, they treat you as though you are. Eventually, you start believing you should be too."
The actress says brain injuries are "misunderstood".
"I often compare brain injury today to where cancer was a century ago: misunderstood, stigmatised and hidden from view."
"When rehabilitation is available, it's usually measured in weeks rather than years and focused on only the most visible symptoms. Brain injury recovery is still in its infancy, leading to lost potential, lost livelihoods and too many people falling through the cracks."
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