Patient Experience
I was visiting Istanbul from Germany when I developed severe abdominal pain and fever. As a 72-year-old with diabetes, I was terrified in a foreign country. Dr. İbrahim at Acibadem International didn't just treat me—he became my temporary guardian. He diagnosed diverticulitis with complications, arranged my hospitalization personally, and visited me twice daily even on weekends. What amazed me was how he explained everything in clear German medical terms while showing genuine concern for my anxiety about being away from home. His team coordinated with my German doctors seamlessly. He's not just a brilliant internist; he's a compassionate human being who heals both body and spirit.
Our 8-year-old son Leo had been suffering from mysterious recurrent fevers and joint pain for months. Multiple doctors dismissed it as 'growing pains.' Dr. İbrahim approached it like a detective novel—he spent 45 minutes just taking history, asking questions about things no one else had considered, like recent travel (we'd been to Greece) and even our pet parrot's health. He ordered specific tests that revealed Familial Mediterranean Fever, a condition rare in our region. His gentle manner with our frightened child—using toy models to explain what was happening in his body—was as impressive as his diagnostic skill. He created a treatment plan that has given our boy his childhood back.
As a 45-year-old executive, I went to Dr. İbrahim for what I thought would be a routine executive health checkup. Instead, he noticed subtle inconsistencies in my blood pressure readings between arms during what seemed like casual conversation. He insisted on further cardiac investigation despite my protests about my busy schedule. The subsequent tests revealed an asymptomatic aortic dissection that required immediate surgery. His persistence literally saved my life. What stands out is his holistic approach—he's now coordinating my rehabilitation with nutrition and stress management strategies, treating the root causes, not just the emergency. He practices medicine like an artist sees the whole canvas, not just one brushstroke.
My mother, 81 with heart failure and renal issues, was what doctors call a 'complex patient'—multiple specialists giving conflicting advice. Dr. İbrahim became her medical conductor. He didn't just manage her medications; he created a unified symphony from the cacophony of treatments. During a late-night crisis, he answered our video call personally at 11 PM, guiding us through immediate steps until the ambulance arrived. At the hospital, he didn't just treat her acute problem—he revised her entire care plan, simplifying it to what she could actually manage at home. His respect for her dignity ('She's the captain, I'm the navigator,' he'd say) transformed her care. He sees the person, not just the pathology.