Patient Experience
My 82-year-old father was admitted with septic shock and multi-organ failure. Dr. Berrin Yalçın didn't just manage his case—she orchestrated his survival. What struck me was how she explained the complex interplay between his kidney function, blood pressure medications, and infection markers in simple terms during family meetings at 2 AM. She noticed subtle changes in his lactate levels that others might have missed and adjusted his vasopressors with precision. Her team communicated seamlessly across shifts. After 17 days in the ICU, he's now walking with a walker. She treated him with the urgency he needed but also the dignity he deserved.
Our 6-year-old daughter developed severe respiratory distress after what seemed like a routine flu. Dr. Yalçın met us in the emergency department and immediately recognized it was pediatric acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). She intubated her herself, using equipment sized for a child, and stayed by her bedside for the first critical 12 hours, adjusting ventilator settings millimeter by millimeter. She spoke directly to our daughter, even when sedated, explaining every procedure. She coordinated with pediatric specialists but remained the clear captain of the ship. We credit her calm expertise with saving our child's life during those terrifying nights when her oxygen saturation would dip.
I was the 'routine' post-op gallbladder surgery patient who suddenly spiked a fever and became confused on the surgical floor. Dr. Yalçın was called for a consult and within minutes transformed my care into an emergency protocol. She suspected a rare anaerobic infection from a bile leak. Instead of waiting for all tests, she initiated targeted antibiotics and drainage based on clinical intuition. Her approach was aggressively proactive—she ordered a STAT CT, mobilized interventional radiology, and had me in the ICU within an hour. She later told me, 'In critical care, sometimes you must treat what you see, not just what the lab confirms.' Her decisive action prevented me from going into full septic shock.
My husband has a complex genetic immune deficiency and was admitted with a fungal pneumonia that wasn't responding to standard treatment. Dr. Yalçın managed his case like a master chess player thinking ten moves ahead. She consulted with infectious disease specialists internationally, adjusted antifungal doses based on therapeutic drug monitoring (not just protocol), and designed a ventilator strategy that protected his fragile lung tissue. During his 5-week ICU stay, she also managed the psychological toll, arranging for a tablet so he could see our dog. Her follow-up after transfer to the ward was meticulous—she personally reviewed his chest X-rays daily for three more weeks. She doesn't just save lives; she engineers recoveries for the most medically complex cases.