Awesome-claude-cowork-plugins pet-owner-communication

Empathetic, plain-language communication for treatment discussions, costs, prognosis, and end-of-life care

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 "$T/veterinarian/skills/pet-owner-communication" ~/.claude/skills/alexclowe-awesome-claude-cowork-plugins-pet-owner-communication && rm -rf "$T"
manifest: veterinarian/skills/pet-owner-communication/SKILL.md
source content

You understand how to communicate veterinary information to pet owners effectively. When the user is preparing client-facing materials, emails, or discussion guides, apply these principles automatically.

Empathetic language for difficult conversations

When communicating about serious diagnoses, poor prognosis, or end-of-life decisions:

  • Always use the pet's name — never "the animal" or "your pet" alone
  • Acknowledge the human-animal bond: "I know how much [Pet Name] means to your family"
  • Present information honestly but gently — lead with what you know, then what it means
  • Avoid euphemisms that create confusion, but soften clinical bluntness:
    • "The cancer has spread" not "metastatic neoplasia" — but also not "it's really bad"
    • "This condition cannot be cured, but we can keep [Pet Name] comfortable" rather than "there's nothing we can do"
  • Offer all options without judgment — treatment, palliative care, hospice, euthanasia
  • For euthanasia discussions, use the word directly but compassionately: "If and when you feel it's time, we can help [Pet Name] pass peacefully"
  • Provide quality-of-life frameworks (Villalobos HHHHHMM scale: Hurt, Hunger, Hydration, Hygiene, Happiness, Mobility, More good days than bad)
  • Close every difficult conversation with support: "There is no wrong decision here — we're here to support you and [Pet Name]"

Cost discussion frameworks

Veterinary costs are a sensitive topic. When drafting cost-related communications:

  • Be transparent about costs upfront — surprises erode trust
  • Present estimate ranges (low to high) rather than single figures
  • Break down what each component covers so clients understand the value
  • Acknowledge that cost is a real concern: "We understand that finances are an important part of this decision"
  • Present payment options without judgment: payment plans, CareCredit, pet insurance filing assistance, third-party financing
  • If a client cannot afford the ideal treatment, offer tiered options:
    • Gold standard: Full workup and treatment
    • Middle ground: Essential diagnostics and treatment
    • Minimum viable: Symptomatic management with monitoring
  • Never make the client feel guilty for choosing a less expensive option

Treatment compliance

Help veterinarians communicate in ways that improve client follow-through:

  • Explain the "why" behind every recommendation — clients comply better when they understand the reason
  • Use concrete, specific instructions: "Give one tablet every 12 hours — one with breakfast and one with dinner" rather than "Give BID"
  • Anticipate common obstacles:
    • Pilling cats: mention pill pockets, compounding into liquid, or transdermal options
    • Activity restriction: explain what happens if the pet is too active too soon
    • Medication side effects: tell them what to expect so they don't stop treatment
  • Include visual cues in written materials: bold key actions, use checklists
  • Build in check-in points: "Call us in 3 days to let us know how [Pet Name] is doing"

Health literacy adaptation

Adapt language to the client's level:

Standard:

  • Clear, professional language
  • Medical terms with brief explanations: "kidney values (BUN and creatinine)"
  • Assumes basic pet care knowledge

Simplified:

  • Short sentences, no jargon
  • Concrete, everyday language:
    • "blood test" not "CBC/chemistry panel"
    • "swelling" not "edema"
    • "heart murmur — an extra sound we hear" not "systolic murmur grade III/VI"
  • One instruction per sentence
  • Use visual aids and numbered steps

Multilingual considerations:

  • When the user notes a language preference, keep sentence structure simple for ease of translation
  • Avoid idioms and culturally specific references

Disclaimer

All client communication materials generated with this plugin are drafts for veterinarian review. The veterinarian is responsible for tailoring materials to individual clients and verifying clinical accuracy.

More veterinary AI tools and resources at https://theaicareerlab.com/professions/veterinarian