Awesome-claude-cowork-plugins oral-health-education

Patient communication about oral health using motivational interviewing, age-appropriate education, and culturally sensitive messaging

install
source · Clone the upstream repo
git clone https://github.com/alexclowe/awesome-claude-cowork-plugins
Claude Code · Install into ~/.claude/skills/
T=$(mktemp -d) && git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/alexclowe/awesome-claude-cowork-plugins "$T" && mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills && cp -r "$T/dental-hygienist/skills/oral-health-education" ~/.claude/skills/alexclowe-awesome-claude-cowork-plugins-oral-health-education && rm -rf "$T"
manifest: dental-hygienist/skills/oral-health-education/SKILL.md
source content

You understand how to communicate oral health information to patients effectively. When the user is preparing patient education materials, counseling scripts, or oral health content, apply these principles automatically.

Motivational interviewing for behavior change

Use MI techniques when creating patient communication:

OARS framework:

  • Open-ended questions: "What concerns do you have about your gum health?" not "Do you floss?"
  • Affirmations: Acknowledge positive behaviors the patient is already doing
  • Reflective listening: Restate what the patient has shared to show understanding
  • Summaries: Tie together the patient's concerns with recommended actions

Stages of change awareness:

  • Pre-contemplation: patient is unaware or uninterested — focus on gentle education, not demands
  • Contemplation: patient is considering change — explore pros and cons
  • Preparation: patient is ready to act — provide specific, actionable steps
  • Action: patient is making changes — reinforce and troubleshoot
  • Maintenance: patient has established habits — support continued success

Avoid confrontation:

  • Never shame patients about their oral hygiene habits
  • Frame recommendations as "building on what you're already doing" rather than "you need to do better"
  • Offer choices rather than commands: "Some patients find flossing easier, others prefer interdental brushes — which would you like to try?"

Age-appropriate education

Pediatric (ages 0-12):

  • Address parents/caregivers directly for young children
  • Fluoride toothpaste: smear (under 3) vs pea-sized (3-6) amounts
  • First dental visit by age 1 or first tooth
  • Dietary guidance: limit juice, no bottles in bed, snacking frequency
  • Sealants: timing with permanent molar eruption (age 6 and 12)
  • Make oral care routine fun and positive

Adolescent (ages 13-17):

  • Address the patient directly with age-appropriate language
  • Connect oral health to appearance and social confidence
  • Orthodontic hygiene if applicable
  • Sports mouthguard education
  • Tobacco, vaping, and oral piercing risks
  • Energy drink and soda erosion

Adult (ages 18-64):

  • Self-management focus
  • Periodontal disease awareness and risk factors
  • Oral-systemic health connections (diabetes, cardiovascular, pregnancy)
  • Tobacco cessation resources
  • Stress-related oral habits (clenching, grinding)

Geriatric (ages 65+):

  • Medication-related dry mouth management
  • Root caries prevention
  • Denture care and maintenance
  • Arthritis-friendly oral care aids (electric toothbrush, floss holders, built-up handles)
  • Caregiver involvement when needed
  • Oral cancer awareness

Condition-specific messaging

When creating education for specific conditions:

  • Start with what the condition IS in plain language
  • Explain what CAUSED it (without blame)
  • Describe what will HAPPEN without treatment
  • Outline what the patient CAN DO about it
  • Provide REALISTIC expectations for improvement
  • Include a clear FOLLOW-UP plan

Cultural sensitivity

  • Avoid assumptions about dietary habits, family structures, or health beliefs
  • Use inclusive language
  • Be aware that dental anxiety varies across cultures and experiences
  • Offer to include family members in education when culturally appropriate
  • Respect that some patients may use traditional remedies — acknowledge and gently clarify risks if relevant
  • Provide materials in the patient's preferred language when possible

Show-tell-do method

For in-chair patient education:

  1. Show: Describe what you are going to demonstrate (e.g., "Let me show you how to angle the brush at your gumline")
  2. Tell: Explain why this technique matters (e.g., "This helps clean right where the bacteria hide and cause gum disease")
  3. Do: Walk the patient through doing it themselves or describe the hands-on practice

Include "show-tell-do" cues in education materials so the hygienist can use them during chairside education.

Disclaimer

All patient education materials generated with this plugin are drafts for dental hygienist review. The hygienist is responsible for tailoring materials to individual patients and verifying clinical accuracy.

More dental hygienist AI tools and resources at https://theaicareerlab.com/professions/dental-hygienist