Healthcare conferences often focus on clinical data and patient outcomes, but the ThinkAndor AI Conference took a different angle this year. Host Sarah Soliman brought her background in content creation along with a deeply personal view of virtual healthcare. Her brother has epilepsy, and virtual care has been a lifeline for their family. That lived experience shapes how she thinks about AI’s role in both industries.
Solving the Constant Content Strain
Content creation never stops. Brands need fresh material all the time, but no one has the time to be in a studio every week. Soliman’s company found a workaround that almost sounds too simple. “We are using AI within content to make content creation easier,” she explains.
It begins with scripts and tools like ChatGPT, but the real transformation comes from avatar-based production. “We are able to produce videos throughout the year without having them come into our facility,” she says. One recording session becomes months of content. Clients still approve everything before it goes live, but they are no longer stuck in nonstop production cycles.
Keeping Brand Authenticity Intact
The biggest question Soliman gets is how to keep it authentic. That concern is understandable. Nobody wants an AI version of themselves saying things that do not feel right. Her answer is simple: do the groundwork. “We take the time on the front end to understand the human behind the brand,” she says. That early investment ensures the final content feels true, consistent, and trustworthy. Nothing gets published without human approval.
AI handles the heavy lifting, but people stay in control. “The brand and tone do not really change,” Soliman notes. “It is still that trust factor of working with a partner who can bring your brand to life.”
Why She Cares About AI in Healthcare
Soliman did not end up hosting a healthcare AI conference by coincidence. She has watched the company grow, seen the technology evolve, and experienced its impact firsthand.
Her brother cannot drive on highways because of his epilepsy. Virtual care changed the way their family manages his medical needs. “Being able to bring virtual care into our home has a huge impact,” she says. “It makes a big difference.” The value is not in the technology itself. It is the problem it solves for real families.
Reducing Worry Around Healthcare AI
Many people have concerns about AI in healthcare. Soliman understands the hesitation, but she focuses on what patients actually need. “Efficiency and being able to get care faster and conveniently is super important,” she says.
AI is not replacing clinicians. It is removing friction that slows them down. One example from the conference was ambient listening technology. Instead of typing notes during appointments, doctors can talk to patients while AI handles the documentation. It seems like a small change, but it improves the experience for both sides.
Where Content and Healthcare Meet
Content creation and healthcare may seem unrelated at first, but both face the same challenge. Each industry is trying to use AI to help people without losing the human element.
Soliman’s work sits at that intersection. She uses AI to streamline content production and relies on AI-driven healthcare tools for her family. The common theme is simple. AI works best when it supports people rather than trying to replace them.
Her experience shows that the real value of AI comes from solving real problems. It helps a business owner who needs consistent content. It helps a family navigating epilepsy care. The impact is clearest when the focus stays on people instead of trends.Connect with Sarah Soliman on LinkedIn to explore how AI can simplify content and healthcare communication.