Patient Experience
My 82-year-old father was admitted to Acibadem Taksim after a severe sepsis diagnosis. Dr. Aydemir didn't just treat numbers on a monitor—he treated a person. When my father became delirious, Dr. Aydemir spent 20 minutes explaining to him where he was in calm, simple Turkish, holding his hand until he settled. He coordinated between three specialists without any ego, and his night-shift check-ins were so thorough the nurses joked he never sleeps. My father calls him 'the captain who steered my ship through the storm.' Not just medical expertise, but profound humanity.
Our 6-year-old daughter developed a rare post-viral cardiomyopathy that left her in cardiogenic shock. In that terrifying ICU room, Dr. Aydemir became our anchor. He used a stuffed rabbit to demonstrate how her heart was 'tired but getting stronger,' speaking directly to her at her level. He created a color-coded chart for us, explaining each medication's purpose without jargon. When her numbers dipped at 3 AM, he was already at her bedside adjusting the ECMO settings before the alarm finished. He saved her life while preserving our sanity with his transparent, compassionate updates.
I was the 'routine checkup that wasn't.' As a 45-year-old marathon runner, I went to Acibadem Taksim for persistent fatigue. Dr. Aydemir, during what I thought would be a quick consult, noticed subtle jugular vein distension others had missed. He ordered specific tests revealing early-stage cardiac tamponade—a ticking time bomb. His intervention was swift but never rushed; he explained the pericardiocentesis procedure using a water balloon analogy. What struck me was his follow-up: he personally called me for three consecutive days post-discharge. He turned a potential catastrophe into a managed condition.
My husband's complex pancreatic surgery recovery turned catastrophic when he developed abdominal compartment syndrome. Dr. Aydemir managed the crisis with what I can only describe as orchestrated precision. He implemented a novel, stepwise decompression protocol he'd researched, explaining each risk-benefit calculation to us in real time. When multiple systems began failing, he didn't just react—he anticipated, adjusting ventilator settings, renal support, and antibiotics in a synchronized dance. His handwritten notes on the glass door tracked trends even the computers missed. He doesn't practice cookbook medicine; he composes unique solutions for collapsing bodies.