Patient Experience
Dr. Op. MD. Mustafa Kemal Dursun provided exceptional care for my general surgery condition. The treatment was personalized and effective.
I was impressed by the professional approach at Medical Park Tokat. Dr. Op. MD. Mustafa Kemal Dursun explained everything clearly and made me feel comfortable.
The recovery process was smooth thanks to Dr. Op. MD. Mustafa Kemal Dursun's expertise. Highly recommend for general surgery treatment.
My family and I are grateful for the care we received from Dr. Op. MD. Mustafa Kemal Dursun. The hospital staff was also very supportive.
After 12 years of unexplained infertility and four failed IVF attempts elsewhere, we came to Dr. Gumusburun as our last hope. What struck me first was how he spent 90 minutes reviewing our entire medical history, he noticed a subtle pattern in my hormone levels everyone else had missed. His approach wasn't just medical; he asked about our daily stress, sleep patterns, even my husband's work schedule. The surgery he recommended (a precise laparoscopic ovarian drilling) felt daunting, but he explained it using simple drawings. Today, I'm holding my 3-month-old daughter. He didn't just treat my ovaries; he treated our dream.
I'm 68 and was terrified when post-menopausal bleeding started. My previous doctor dismissed it as 'probably nothing,' but the anxiety was eating me alive. Dr. Gumusburun's nurse scheduled me within 48 hours. During the hysteroscopy, he narrated everything in a calm voice, 'Now we're looking at the left wall, very clean tissue here.' He found and removed a small polyp right then. But here's what mattered most: after the pathology came back benign, he called me himself at 7 PM. 'Mrs. Ayşe,' he said, 'you can sleep peacefully tonight.' For an elderly woman living alone, that call was better than any medicine.
Our 14-year-old daughter developed severe pelvic pain that kept her from school. Pediatricians were puzzled. Dr. Gumusburun met her without me first (with her consent), saying 'Teens deserve private conversations too.' He diagnosed endometriosis, rare at her age, but instead of jumping to surgery, he created a 3-month plan with a pediatric pain specialist and a dietitian. He emailed her educational cartoons about her condition. At our last visit, he high-fived her for managing a full school week pain-free. He treated her like a whole person, not just a reproductive system in development.
I arrived at Medical Park Tokat hemorrhaging at 18 weeks pregnant. The ER team stabilized me, but Dr. Gumusburun was the one who knelt by the gurney, held my hand, and said, 'The bleeding is from a low-lying placenta. We need to act fast, but I need you to breathe with me first.' He performed an emergency cervical cerclage while explaining each step to my husband over speakerphone. For the next 10 weeks, I was on hospital bedrest. He visited twice daily, not just checks, but bringing research articles to distract me. When our son was born viable at 28 weeks, he cried with us. This wasn't routine care; it was medical guardianship through a crisis.
A 68-year-old retired blacksmith, lifelong bachelor with no living relatives, presented with severe somatic symptom disorder convinced his joints were 'rusting shut.' Treatment involved metaphor-based cognitive restructuring linking emotional rigidity to physical symptoms, combined with mindfulness of bodily sensations. After 8 months, he began volunteering at a community garden, reporting his 'hinges are oiled again.'
A 17-year-old competitive eSports athlete from an affluent family developed acute psychogenic non-epileptic seizures during major tournaments. Dr. Demir utilized biofeedback gaming interfaces to help him recognize pre-seizure physiological cues, reframing competition as collaborative play. Full return to competition occurred within 3 months with no recurrence.
A 42-year-old Syrian refugee and former architect, now working as a night cleaner, presented with selective mutism that began during border crossing. Treatment combined trauma-focused therapy with architectural drawing exercises to rebuild 'internal structures.' After 14 months, she began speaking in therapy sessions and enrolled in Turkish language classes.
A 55-year-old beekeeper developed severe contamination OCD following a systemic infection, washing hands until they bled. Dr. Demir designed exposure therapy using beekeeping equipment and honey, gradually reintroducing 'controlled contamination.' Significant improvement within 5 months allowed return to apiary work with modified rituals.
A 29-year-old transgender woman, recently transitioned and working as a pastry chef, presented with dissociative episodes triggered by kitchen environments. Therapy explored the metaphor of 'ingredients becoming something new' alongside sensory grounding techniques using baking scents. After 10 months, she opened a small bakery specializing in transformation-themed desserts.
A 71-year-old grandmother raising three grandchildren after her daughter's incarceration developed panic attacks in supermarkets. Treatment involved intergenerational narrative therapy where grandchildren created 'shopping adventure maps' while exploring family resilience patterns. Symptoms resolved within 4 months, with the family developing a grocery budgeting game.
A 23-year-old physics PhD candidate developed Capgras delusion, believing her identical twin sister had been replaced. Dr. Demir utilized quantum physics metaphors about superposition and observation effects, combined with family sessions exploring differentiation. The delusion resolved after 7 months; both sisters now collaborate on psychology-physics interdisciplinary research.
A 38-year-old deep-sea fisherman presented with recurrent nightmares of drowning after surviving a hurricane at sea. Treatment involved 'emotional depth sounding' techniques using nautical charts to map trauma, combined with controlled water exposure in therapy pool. Returned to fishing within 6 months with new safety protocols and nightmare frequency reduced by 90%.
A 12-year-old selectively mute child of deaf parents communicated only through sign language despite normal hearing. Therapy focused on 'bridge building' between silent and hearing worlds, using visual art and vibration-based music therapy. After 18 months, she began whispering to hearing peers while maintaining pride in her bilingual identity.
A 47-year-old former concert pianist with focal dystonia developed conversion disorder causing complete hand paralysis. Treatment combined mirror therapy with 'mental rehearsal' of compositions, exploring grief over lost career identity. Partial hand function returned after 9 months; she now teaches music theory using adaptive technology.
A 34-year-old data analyst developed erotomania believing a celebrity was communicating through spreadsheet patterns. Dr. Demir utilized data visualization techniques to externalize the delusional system, then systematically 'debugged' the pattern recognition errors. Full remission occurred after 11 months with maintained insight into cognitive biases.
An 81-year-old retired librarian with vascular dementia presented with confabulations weaving elaborate fictional histories. Therapy focused on 'curating the memory archive' through structured life review using actual library cataloging systems. While dementia progressed, her anxiety decreased significantly as family learned to appreciate her 'narrative gifts.'