A mum-of-four had an orange-sized tumour removed from her jaw - after being spotted at the side of the road by surgeons passing through her village.
Marie Elisa, 45, had been living with the benign tumour for five years - despite it constantly growing - because she couldn't afford medical treatment.
The first signs of the tumour began in 2019, with a toothache which was treated with over-the-counter painkillers.
But it kept growing, until nearly the entire right side of her face was swollen - forcing her to stop farming, and leaving her family struggling financially.
Marie Elisa, from Berangotra, Madagascar, said: "The painkillers helped for a time. The swelling started, and it just kept getting bigger until it reached this point.
"I could no longer work in the fields or sell at the market.
"And my daughter had to stop school because I couldn't pay her fees."
Feeling desperate, Marie Elisa turned to non-medical healers for help - but the tumour continued to grow.
She saw a doctor, who recommended surgery to remove the mass from her face.
But she was unable to afford the surgery - which could have set her back hundreds of pounds, according to Mercy Ships.
In January 2024, a patient selection team from international health charity Mercy Ships had to make an unplanned detour to Marie Elisa's village in Madagascar, due to a cyclone in the north of the country.
By chance, they spotted Marie Elisa while driving through the local market.
Marie Elisa, 45, had been living with the benign tumour for five years - despite it constantly growing - because she couldn't afford medical treatment.
The first signs of the tumour began in 2019, with a toothache which was treated with over-the-counter painkillers.
But it kept growing, until nearly the entire right side of her face was swollen - forcing her to stop farming, and leaving her family struggling financially.
Marie Elisa, from Berangotra, Madagascar, said: "The painkillers helped for a time. The swelling started, and it just kept getting bigger until it reached this point.
"I could no longer work in the fields or sell at the market.
"And my daughter had to stop school because I couldn't pay her fees."
Feeling desperate, Marie Elisa turned to non-medical healers for help - but the tumour continued to grow.
She saw a doctor, who recommended surgery to remove the mass from her face.
But she was unable to afford the surgery - which could have set her back hundreds of pounds, according to Mercy Ships.
In January 2024, a patient selection team from international health charity Mercy Ships had to make an unplanned detour to Marie Elisa's village in Madagascar, due to a cyclone in the north of the country.
By chance, they spotted Marie Elisa while driving through the local market.
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FunTranscript
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01:00I don't know what to do.
01:02I don't know if to go by myself to the market but I think he needs to go by himself.
01:07Do you think you'll get better?
01:10Now or in the future?
01:11Not when you're sick and tired.
01:16All he cares about is getting by by himself and feeding his children.
01:19You don't get better.
01:20and three of us in the bus screamed,
01:23stop the bus!
01:25Our logistics coordinator got out and
01:28delicately explained to the community
01:30that had gathered around what Mercyships was.
01:33That was not easy to convince them
01:35because people in their country
01:38told them that when you go to Mercyships
01:41you will not come back.
01:43But what we did was we brought the photos
01:46of the former patient.
01:49I think she was quite reserved and
01:51honestly a little scared that a whole bunch of
01:53people came off a bus just to
01:55see if we could help her.
01:56But I think as she started chatting with us
01:59and learning about what we do
02:01she became a bit more open and
02:03was really excited at the opportunity
02:05to come and join us on the ship.
02:07So Maria-Lisa has a mandibular tumour.
02:18It can be life-threatening as it grows.
02:22So it was a benign tumour,
02:24but the size of it can cause
02:26an immense amount of issues.
02:37I am very happy that I was able to help
02:40Maria-Lisa with her tumour.
02:43I would like to say thank you.
03:00The story of Maria-Lisa,
03:03it reminds me to the story of
03:05Bartholomew and the Bible.
03:07Bartholomew was blind.
03:09He was sitting by the roadside of the lake.
03:12Maria-Lisa did.
03:14It's just an incredible experience
03:17to witness even that small miracle happen.
03:20You are meant to be here.
03:22She was meant to be on that side of the road.
03:35I am very happy that I was able to help Maria-Lisa
03:38with her tumour.
03:40It can be life-threatening as it grows.
03:43So it was a benign tumour,
03:45but the size of it can cause an immense amount of issues.
04:05For more UN videos visit www.un.org