Founder
SlideCraft Pro was built by a practicing neurosurgeon, not a tech team that surveyed clinicians once and shipped a template pack. Every design decision comes from someone who gives medical lectures and has felt the cost of the current alternative.
Skull base surgery, spine, and brain tumors at Hospital de Clínicas de Porto Alegre (HCPA), a major academic medical center in southern Brazil. The clinical environment is teaching-heavy: grand rounds, case conferences, resident lectures, journal clubs, visiting faculty presentations.
Alongside surgery, there is a software background. The combination is unusual. It means the product was not designed by asking surgeons what they want and then approximating it in a wireframe. It was designed by being the surgeon, then building the tool, then going back to the operating room and using it.
The moment that made the problem undeniable: inheriting a 42-slide vestibular schwannoma deck last updated in 2021. Mixed fonts throughout. Three references that no longer existed at their cited URLs. No speaker notes. A surgical anatomy diagram that had been screenshotted from a PDF at 72 dpi. Presenting it to a live audience the next morning.
The options were to present it as-is, or spend four hours fixing slides that were not built to be maintained. Neither option is good medicine. Neither respects the audience.
That experience is not rare. It is the default for everyone who teaches: residents building their first grand rounds deck, attendings recycling slides from five years ago, fellows inheriting content from someone who graduated. Teaching medicine produces a constant accumulation of slide debt, and the tools available to pay it down were built for marketing teams.
Clinical accuracy first
Every generated slide passes through a PubMed verification pipeline. Uncertain claims are flagged, not silenced. The AI is configured to decline rather than hallucinate when evidence is thin.
Built for how clinicians actually work
The workflow target is 90 seconds to a working outline, not 90 minutes. Export is PPTX that opens on hospital projectors. Speaker notes exist by default, not as an afterthought.
Honest about what AI can and cannot do
Scope is locked at outline approval so the AI cannot drift off-topic mid-build. Flagged claims are displayed, not cleaned up. AI limitations are documented, not buried in fine print.
SlideCraft is not a generic AI presentation tool with “medical” added to the marketing copy. It is not a cardiology template pack designed by someone who looked up the NYHA classification the day before shipping. It is not a physician-facing wrapper around a consumer tool that was not built with clinical accuracy as a constraint.
The medical domain knowledge is in the AI configuration, the verification pipeline, and the product decisions — not in the color scheme or the font choice. A generic slide tool with a stethoscope icon is still a generic slide tool.
The people this is built for know the difference. They have sat through presentations that looked credible and contained outdated dosing. They know what a hallucinated citation looks like when the reference section is seven numbers that do not resolve. SlideCraft was built to be the tool those people can hand to a resident without a follow-up conversation about checking every fact.
The structured-data model behind every deck: SlideV1, citations, review flags.
Before-and-after lectures showing what a SlideCraft rebuild changes.
Essays on citation density, slide cadence, and journal-club preparation.
Upload a .pptx or .pdf and preview a slide-by-slide rebuild before signup.