treatment-plans
by K-Dense-AIThe treatment-plans skill helps generate concise, clinician-focused medical treatment plans in LaTeX/PDF-ready form. It supports general medicine, rehabilitation, mental health, chronic disease, perioperative care, and pain management with SMART goals, evidence-based interventions, minimal citations, and compliance-aware formatting. Ideal for treatment-plans for Technical Writing and structured care documentation.
This skill scores 84/100, which means it is a solid listing candidate for Agent Skills Finder. Directory users get a clearly triggerable medical writing skill for concise treatment plans, with enough workflow structure to reduce guesswork versus a generic prompt, though it still looks more document-heavy than tool-driven.
- Clear skill intent in the frontmatter: generate concise 3-4 page medical treatment plans in LaTeX/PDF for multiple clinical specialties.
- Strong operational framing in the body and references: SMART goals, evidence-based interventions, HIPAA/regulatory compliance, and validation tools are explicitly called out.
- Large, structured skill content with many headings and workflow/constraint signals suggests reusable guidance rather than a placeholder or demo.
- No install command, scripts, or automation assets are present, so users should expect a manual document-wrangling workflow rather than a packaged runner.
- The repository evidence is strong on narrative guidance, but the visible excerpts do not show concrete execution steps end-to-end, so adoption may require some interpretation.
Overview of treatment-plans skill
What treatment-plans does
The treatment-plans skill helps you generate concise, clinically structured treatment plans in LaTeX/PDF-ready form. It is aimed at users who need a fast, professional plan that stays focused on care decisions, measurable goals, and evidence-based interventions rather than long narrative documentation.
Who it is best for
Use the treatment-plans skill if you write for general medical care, rehabilitation, mental health, chronic disease management, perioperative planning, or pain management. It is especially useful for clinicians, technical writers in healthcare, and agents that must turn a rough case summary into a clean, standardized plan.
What makes it different
Unlike a generic prompt, this repository emphasizes brevity, regulatory awareness, and format discipline. The default expectation is a short, practical plan, not a textbook summary, with SMART goals, minimal citations, and documentation that can be validated for clinical usefulness and compliance.
When it is a fit
Choose treatment-plans when the job is to produce a plan that is readable, actionable, and ready to adapt into a document workflow. It is a strong fit for treatment-plans for Technical Writing when you need consistent structure across specialties without losing clinical specificity.
How to Use treatment-plans skill
Install and locate the core files
Use the treatment-plans install flow from your skills manager, then open the skill’s root SKILL.md first. For orientation, also read references/README.md because it summarizes the included plan types and points to the most relevant supporting guidance. If you are auditing behavior before using it, inspect the scientific-skills/treatment-plans folder tree and the referenced documents rather than relying on the top description alone.
Give the skill a complete case brief
Strong treatment-plans usage starts with a compact case summary that includes diagnosis, setting, patient goals, constraints, and what type of plan you want. Better inputs look like: patient age range, condition, acuity, treatment context, target page length, and whether you need general, rehab, mental health, perioperative, or pain-management framing.
Example prompt shape:
Create a 1-page treatment plan for a middle-aged patient with type 2 diabetes and hypertension. Include SMART goals, lifestyle and medication interventions, follow-up cadence, and a concise clinician-facing tone.
Read the repository in the right order
For practical treatment-plans usage, read the overview and the reference guide first, then move into the files that define standards, goals, interventions, and compliance expectations. This helps you avoid missing the skill’s strongest constraint: plans should stay concise while still being clinically complete. If your output is too broad, the issue is usually input scope, not the skill itself.
Tune the output before generation
State any non-negotiables up front: page limit, citation style, audience, specialty, and whether you want a one-page summary or a fuller 3-4 page plan. If you need the skill for Technical Writing, ask it to favor standardized headings, terse language, and reusable phrasing across cases. The clearer your format constraints, the less likely the result will drift into generic prose.
treatment-plans skill FAQ
Is treatment-plans only for one specialty?
No. The treatment-plans guide is built for multiple clinical areas, including general medicine, rehab, mental health, chronic disease, perioperative care, and pain management. That said, it works best when the specialty and care setting are named explicitly in the prompt.
Do I need to know medical terminology to use it?
Not deeply. Beginners can use the treatment-plans skill by supplying a plain-language case summary and asking for a structured plan. More precise clinical inputs improve the result, but the skill is designed to turn rough notes into a clearer treatment document.
How is this different from a normal prompt?
A normal prompt may produce a useful outline, but treatment-plans adds a repeatable structure, stronger constraints on length, and compliance-aware formatting. That matters when you want consistent output across cases or need the result to support downstream documentation work.
When should I not use it?
Do not use treatment-plans when you need a detailed care pathway, a billing document, or a substitute for clinical judgment. It is also a poor fit if you cannot provide enough patient context to support a safe, specific plan.
How to Improve treatment-plans skill
Start with the highest-value clinical facts
To get better treatment-plans results, provide the facts that change care decisions: primary diagnosis, severity, comorbidities, current therapies, risk factors, and the intended care setting. If the case is ambiguous, say what kind of plan you want the model to optimize for, such as symptom control, rehab progress, perioperative readiness, or relapse prevention.
Specify the format you actually need
The most common failure mode is asking for a “treatment plan” without saying whether you want a quick-reference version or a fuller clinical document. Improve output by naming page length, section order, citation expectations, and audience. For example, ask for “a concise 1-page plan for a discharge summary” or “a 3-page clinician-facing plan with minimal inline citations.”
Review for overgeneralization and missing constraints
The first draft may be too broad if the case summary is thin or the plan is not anchored to a specialty workflow. Tighten it by adding what must be included, such as SMART goals, medication class considerations, monitoring intervals, or patient education points. If you use treatment-plans for Technical Writing, check that the language stays reusable without becoming vague.
Iterate by narrowing the next prompt
If the output is close but not sharp enough, refine one variable at a time: diagnosis, audience, length, or care setting. Ask for a revision that adds specificity to interventions, shortens filler, or aligns better with the target specialty. This is usually more effective than asking for a “better” plan without telling the skill what to fix.
