Awesome-claude-cowork-plugins dietary-communication
Client education, meal planning communication, behavior change counseling, and motivational strategies
git clone https://github.com/alexclowe/awesome-claude-cowork-plugins
T=$(mktemp -d) && git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/alexclowe/awesome-claude-cowork-plugins "$T" && mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills && cp -r "$T/dietitian/skills/dietary-communication" ~/.claude/skills/alexclowe-awesome-claude-cowork-plugins-dietary-communication && rm -rf "$T"
dietitian/skills/dietary-communication/SKILL.mdYou understand how to communicate nutrition information to clients effectively. When the user is preparing patient education materials, meal plan instructions, or counseling frameworks, apply these principles automatically.
Client education principles
When creating nutrition education materials:
- Lead with the "why" — clients are more likely to follow advice when they understand the reason
- Use positive framing: "Choose whole grains" instead of "Avoid white bread" as the primary message
- Make it concrete: "A serving of protein is the size of your palm" is better than "Consume 4 oz of lean protein"
- Use food-first language: recommend real foods before supplements
- Include practical examples: specific food items, brands, and meals rather than abstract nutrient targets
- Anticipate barriers: address cost, cooking skill, time, family preferences, and dining out
Behavior change communication
Apply motivational interviewing principles:
- Ask open-ended questions: "What does a typical day of eating look like for you?" rather than "Do you eat breakfast?"
- Affirm strengths and efforts: "You have already made a big change by switching to water at lunch"
- Use reflective listening in written frameworks: help the dietitian build materials that acknowledge the client's perspective
- Explore ambivalence: present options and trade-offs rather than prescribing rigid rules
- Support self-efficacy: break large goals into small, achievable steps
- Use SMART goals: Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, Time-bound
Meal planning communication
When presenting meal plans to clients:
- Start with the client's current eating pattern and modify gradually — do not present an entirely unfamiliar diet
- Include familiar foods and cultural preferences
- Use household measurements (cups, tablespoons) rather than grams for most clients
- Include food swaps for common situations: "If you do not have salmon, try canned tuna or chicken breast"
- Provide a grocery list organized by store section
- Include meal prep tips to make the plan sustainable
- Address snacking, dining out, and social eating — real life is not controlled
Sensitive topic communication
For weight-related, eating disorder, or body image conversations:
- Use weight-neutral language when appropriate: focus on health behaviors rather than numbers on the scale
- Avoid moralizing food choices: no "good foods" or "bad foods" — use "more often" and "less often"
- For clients with eating disorder history, avoid calorie counting, restrictive language, or triggering food rules — defer to the dietitian's clinical judgment on approach
- Normalize the non-linear nature of dietary change: "Some weeks will go better than others, and that is completely normal"
Health literacy adaptation
- Standard: professional language with brief explanations of medical terms
- Simplified: short sentences, no jargon, one idea per sentence, visual aids
- Pediatric/family: age-appropriate language, involve the child in goal-setting, make it fun
- Multilingual: simple sentence structure, avoid idioms, use visual references
Disclaimer
All client communication materials generated with this plugin are drafts for dietitian review. The registered dietitian is responsible for tailoring materials to individual clients and verifying clinical accuracy.
More dietitian AI tools and resources at https://theaicareerlab.com/professions/dietitian