“Learning About Stroke with Little Red Riding Hood” is an educational resource delivered to fourth-grade elementary school students as part of “Brain Rescue Kamisu,” a stroke-awareness initiative jointly undertaken by the City of Kamisu and the University of Tsukuba. It is a digital kamishibai (picture-story show) produced through collaboration between the University’s Faculty of Medicine and Faculty of Art and Design. Its content centers on the mnemonic “FAST,” which captures the principal warning signs of stroke together with the time of onset, and is structured so that children can learn its four components—F = Face, A = Arm, S = Speech, T = Time—over the course of a story, with the aim of equipping them to protect their loved ones from stroke. Targeting elementary school children serves a twofold purpose: in addition to promoting prevention by correcting lifestyle habits from a young age, it anticipates that, should a parent or grandparent suffer a stroke, the child can respond appropriately as a bystander, thereby also fostering an indirect awareness of stroke within the family. By framing the material around the universally familiar fairy tale “Little Red Riding Hood,” the resource adapts specialized medical knowledge into a visual narrative that is approachable and memorable for children—and it is here that the contribution of the arts lies. The material was released on the City of Kamisu’s official YouTube channel in December 2023, and stands as a practical example of university–municipality collaboration that bridges medicine and artistic expression.