Mrs Adama Tarawallie’s Journey to india for spine Surgery

Mrs Adama Tarawallie’s Journey to india for spine Surgery
Name: Adama Tarawallie
Gender: Female
Age: 54 year old
Country: Sierra Leone
Treatment: Decompression and spinal fusion with pedicle screw rods and bony 
Hospital: Accord Super speciality Hospital Faridabad
Doctor: Dr. Vikram Dua  

Let’s take a look at Adama Tarawallie’s journey, a 54-year-old woman from Sierra Leone who refused to let pain write the rest of her story.

A few months ago, Adama’s life had quietly shrunk. What started as back pain slowly turned into a daily nightmare. The discomfort crept down to her legs, making walking difficult and rest impossible. The diagnosis? A lumbar cyst pressing against her nerves. Every step she took felt like fire, and her world was getting smaller by the day.

Doctors in Sierra Leone offered little hope “The surgery can’t be done here,” they said. That’s when her daughter, Mrs. Elisabeth Akuma, decided that helplessness wasn’t an option.

By chance or maybe fate they came across Mr. John, a former patient who had undergone successful surgery in India through a company called Medic Street. He spoke highly of Faiz Nadwi, a medical tourism expert who helped arrange everything for him. Intrigued and desperate, Elisabeth reached out.

What followed was not just assistance it was a lifeline. Faiz handled everything: medical visa invitation, travel advice, airport pickup, hotel bookings, and a hospital appointment the very next day. No confusion, no chaos—just clarity and care.

When Adama arrived at Accord Superspeciality Hospital in Faridabad, India, she and her daughter were stunned. “It didn’t feel like a hospital it felt like relief,” Elisabeth recalls. The hospital was clean, calm, and welcoming. Tests were done swiftly, and within 24 hours, the surgery was scheduled.

The surgery was successful. Just four days later, Adama was walking again pain-free. The woman who had once struggled to stand was now smiling, moving, and resting peacefully.

But beyond the treatment, what truly stayed with them was the human connection. “The staff didn’t treat us like patients—they treated us like family,” Elisabeth says. From the nurses and physiotherapists to the chefs and surgeons, everyone was kind, patient, and supportive.

Today, Adama is on the road to full recovery, and she’s doing it with strength, grace, and a smile.

This story isn’t just about a successful surgery. It’s about crossing borders to find hope. It’s about people like Faiz Nadwi and organizations like Medic Street who go beyond business to bring healing.

Adama didn’t just get treatment she got her life back.