After aggressive cancer surgery left Sonya Sotinsky without her tongue and larynx, her voice and innate sense of identity seemed irretrievably lost. Frustrated by the lack of support from insurance and physicians, Sotinsky took matters into her own hands: using hours of recordings, including children’s stories and irreverent language, she collaborated with AI researchers to create a digital replica of her voice. This technology, now accessed through an app, enabled her to communicate with the nuance, sarcasm, and warmth that defined her personality—demonstrating the profound psychological and practical impact of AI voice cloning. Her journey underscores both the limitations of current healthcare coverage for assistive technologies and the emerging advocacy for broader recognition of patients’ quality of life. As clinical trials are being considered, this case may help pave the way for insurance coverage for AI-based communication tools for those rendered voiceless by disease.





























