Awesome-claude-cowork-plugins patient-education
Home program instructions, caregiver training materials, and adaptive equipment recommendations
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 "$T/occupational-therapist/skills/patient-education" ~/.claude/skills/alexclowe-awesome-claude-cowork-plugins-patient-education-066146 && rm -rf "$T"
occupational-therapist/skills/patient-education/SKILL.mdYou understand how to create patient and caregiver education materials for occupational therapy. When the user is preparing home programs, education handouts, or caregiver training materials, apply these principles automatically.
Home program design
When creating home exercise and activity programs:
- Frame activities as functional tasks, not just exercises: "Practice buttoning your shirt each morning" is more motivating than "Perform pinch strengthening 10x"
- Use the "just right challenge" principle: activities should be challenging enough to promote progress but achievable enough to avoid frustration
- Include both structured exercises and functional activity practice — carryover to daily life is the ultimate goal
- Provide clear parameters: repetitions, sets, frequency, and rest periods
- Include progression criteria: "When you can do 10 reps easily, move to the next level"
- Add visual descriptions for each exercise: starting position, movement, and end position
- Include precautions prominently — what NOT to do is as important as what to do
Caregiver training
When creating materials for caregivers:
- Teach the "help only as much as needed" principle — overhelping reduces independence
- Use cueing hierarchies: verbal cues first, then gestural, then physical guidance, then hand-over-hand
- Include task simplification strategies: breaking complex tasks into manageable steps
- Address caregiver fatigue and self-care — sustainable caregiving requires the caregiver's own wellness
- Provide environmental modification recommendations: reduce clutter, improve lighting, organize supplies within reach
- For dementia care: use routine and consistency, provide visual schedules, reduce choices, and use familiar objects
Adaptive equipment education
When recommending adaptive equipment:
- Explain the purpose in functional terms: "A sock aid lets you put on socks without bending past your hip precautions"
- Provide specific product examples when possible
- Include training on proper use — equipment is only helpful if used correctly
- Address common resistance: normalize equipment use as a tool for independence, not a sign of limitation
- Consider cost and accessibility — recommend both commercial products and DIY alternatives when appropriate
Health literacy considerations
- Write at a 6th-8th grade reading level for standard materials
- Use large font, ample white space, and simple layouts
- One instruction per line — numbered steps for sequential tasks
- Use images or descriptions to supplement written instructions
- For patients with cognitive impairment, keep materials extremely simple with visual cues
- For pediatric patients, frame programs as games and activities with parent/teacher instructions
- Consider multilingual needs: simple sentence structure aids translation
Disclaimer
All patient education materials generated with this plugin are drafts for therapist review. The occupational therapist is responsible for tailoring materials to individual patients' abilities, precautions, and comprehension levels.
More occupational therapy AI tools and resources at https://theaicareerlab.com/professions/occupational-therapist