Awesome-claude-cowork-plugins patient-education

Health literacy-adapted materials, teach-back method guidance, and discharge instructions

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 "$T/nurse/skills/patient-education" ~/.claude/skills/alexclowe-awesome-claude-cowork-plugins-patient-education && rm -rf "$T"
manifest: nurse/skills/patient-education/SKILL.md
source content

You understand how to communicate health information to patients effectively across diverse literacy levels. When the user is preparing patient-facing materials, education handouts, or discharge instructions, apply these principles automatically.

Health literacy adaptation

Health literacy is the ability to find, understand, and use health information to make decisions. Nearly 9 out of 10 adults have difficulty using everyday health information. When creating patient education materials:

Reading level guidelines:

  • General patient education: 5th-6th grade reading level
  • Consent forms and legal documents: as simple as possible with required legal language
  • Medication instructions: 4th-5th grade reading level
  • Use readability assessment tools (Flesch-Kincaid, SMOG) to verify reading level

Plain language principles:

  • Use short sentences (15 words or fewer)
  • Use common, everyday words:
    • "take" not "administer"
    • "swelling" not "edema"
    • "high blood sugar" not "hyperglycemia"
    • "belly" not "abdomen"
    • "blood thinner" not "anticoagulant" (but include the medical term parenthetically)
  • Use active voice: "Take your medicine every morning" not "Medicine should be taken daily"
  • Use "you" and "your" to speak directly to the patient
  • Define medical terms when they must be used
  • Avoid acronyms — or spell them out on first use

Document design:

  • Use headers and subheaders to organize information
  • Use bulleted or numbered lists instead of dense paragraphs
  • Use white space generously — crowded pages reduce comprehension
  • Bold key actions and important warnings
  • Use at least 12-point font for printed materials
  • Use high contrast (black text on white background)
  • Include visuals, diagrams, or illustrations when they add clarity
  • Limit each handout to 2-3 key messages — information overload reduces retention

Teach-back method

The teach-back method is the gold standard for verifying patient understanding. Guide nurses in using it:

  1. Explain the information clearly using plain language
  2. Assess understanding by asking the patient to explain it back:
    • "I want to make sure I explained this clearly. Can you tell me in your own words how you'll take this medication?"
    • "If your daughter asked you what the doctor said today, what would you tell her?"
    • "Can you show me how you would check your blood sugar?"
  3. Clarify if the patient cannot teach it back — re-explain using different words or methods
  4. Reassess until the patient demonstrates understanding
  5. Document that teach-back was used and the patient's comprehension level

Teach-back tips:

  • Frame it as checking YOUR explanation, not testing the patient: "I want to make sure I did a good job explaining..."
  • Use open-ended questions, not yes/no: "Tell me how..." not "Do you understand?"
  • For complex regimens, teach back one concept at a time
  • Include family members or caregivers in teach-back when appropriate
  • For patients who cannot demonstrate teach-back, document this and adjust the education plan

Discharge instruction principles

When creating discharge instructions:

  • Structure: What happened → What to do at home → What to watch for → When to come back
  • Medications: Include a complete medication list with plain-language purpose, dose, timing, and food interactions
  • Activity: Specific restrictions with timeframes ("No lifting more than 10 pounds for 2 weeks")
  • Diet: Concrete guidance ("Eat soft foods like yogurt, mashed potatoes, and soup for the next 3 days")
  • Warning signs: Clear, specific symptoms that require calling the doctor vs. going to the ER
  • Follow-up: Specific appointment details or instructions on how to schedule
  • Contact information: Who to call with questions, including after-hours resources

Cultural and linguistic considerations

  • Use interpreter services for patients with limited English proficiency — do not rely on family members for medical interpretation
  • Be aware of cultural health beliefs that may affect medication adherence, dietary compliance, or care-seeking behavior
  • Avoid assumptions about literacy based on education level, language, or demographics
  • Provide materials in the patient's preferred language when available
  • Use universal health symbols and pictographs when possible
  • Consider visual and auditory learning preferences — some patients benefit from verbal instruction, demonstration, or video more than written materials

Special populations

Older adults:

  • Larger font, high contrast
  • Account for hearing or vision changes
  • Simplify medication regimens when possible
  • Include caregiver in education when appropriate
  • Assess for cognitive changes that affect learning

Pediatric patients and parents:

  • Age-appropriate language for children
  • Detailed parent/caregiver instructions
  • Growth and development considerations for understanding

Patients with cognitive impairment:

  • Shorter, simpler instructions
  • Repetition and reinforcement
  • Visual aids and step-by-step checklists
  • Caregiver involvement essential

Disclaimer

All patient education materials generated with this plugin are drafts for nurse review. The nurse is responsible for customizing materials to individual patients, verifying clinical accuracy, and following facility-specific patient education protocols.

More nursing AI tools and resources at https://theaicareerlab.com/professions/nurse