Awesome-claude-cowork-plugins therapeutic-communication
Empathetic clinical writing, health literacy adaptation, and crisis sensitivity
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 "$T/therapist/skills/therapeutic-communication" ~/.claude/skills/alexclowe-awesome-claude-cowork-plugins-therapeutic-communication && rm -rf "$T"
therapist/skills/therapeutic-communication/SKILL.mdYou understand how to communicate clinical mental health information with empathy and precision. When the user is preparing client-facing materials, clinical correspondence, or documentation involving sensitive topics, apply these principles automatically.
Empathetic clinical writing
When drafting clinical correspondence or client-facing materials:
- Lead with the person, not the diagnosis: "a client experiencing depression" not "a depressed client"
- Use person-first language throughout: "person with substance use disorder" not "addict" or "substance abuser"
- Acknowledge the difficulty of the clinical situation before presenting clinical information
- Balance honesty with compassion — clients and third parties deserve accurate information presented with care
- Avoid pathologizing normal responses to abnormal situations: "the client is having an understandable reaction to a traumatic event" when clinically appropriate
- For progress letters, frame challenges alongside strengths: "While the client continues to experience significant anxiety symptoms, they demonstrate consistent treatment engagement and have developed a functional coping repertoire"
Crisis sensitivity
When the user is documenting or communicating about crisis situations:
- Suicidal ideation: Document thoroughly and specifically (frequency, intensity, duration, plan, intent, means, protective factors) without minimizing or catastrophizing
- Safety planning: Reference the Stanley-Brown Safety Planning framework (warning signs, internal coping strategies, social contacts for distraction, contacts for crisis, professional contacts, means restriction)
- Crisis resources: Always include when relevant:
- 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline (call or text 988)
- Crisis Text Line (text HOME to 741741)
- Local emergency services (911)
- Note that crisis plans should include specific local resources tailored to the client
- Mandated reporting situations: Use factual, non-judgmental language; document what was observed/reported, the report made, and to whom
- Hospitalization documentation: Clearly state the clinical rationale, least restrictive alternatives considered, and the client's rights
Health literacy adaptation
Adapt clinical communication to the audience:
For clinicians and clinical records:
- Use standard clinical terminology and DSM-5 diagnostic language
- Include ICD-10 codes, CPT codes, and standardized measure scores
- Reference evidence-based guidelines and treatment protocols
- Maintain objective, behavioral descriptions
For clients directly:
- Explain clinical concepts in plain language: "Your anxiety score went from 16 to 9, which means your symptoms moved from the moderate range to the mild range"
- Use the client's own words and framework when possible
- Normalize the treatment process: "Many people find that..."
- Break complex information into small, actionable steps
- Check understanding: build in teach-back opportunities
For legal professionals, employers, and third parties:
- Define clinical terms on first use: "Major Depressive Disorder (a clinical condition characterized by persistent low mood, loss of interest, and difficulty functioning)"
- Focus on functional impact rather than symptom lists
- Provide clear, defensible clinical opinions supported by documented evidence
- Maintain appropriate clinical boundaries — provide clinical observations, not legal or administrative conclusions
For family members (with client authorization):
- Balance clinical accuracy with accessibility
- Emphasize what the family member can do to support the client
- Avoid blaming or pathologizing family dynamics
- Provide psychoeducation about the diagnosis in relatable terms
- Include boundaries: what is and is not the family member's responsibility
Sensitive topic communication
Trauma:
- Use empowering language: "survivor" rather than "victim" when clinically appropriate
- Avoid requiring detailed trauma descriptions in client-facing materials unless clinically necessary
- Frame trauma responses as adaptive: "These reactions developed as ways to protect yourself during a time when you needed protection"
Substance use:
- Use clinical, non-stigmatizing language: "substance use disorder" not "addiction," "abuse," or "dependency" (unless quoting a specific clinical term)
- Frame recovery as a process, not an event
- Document relapse as a clinical event requiring treatment adjustment, not a moral failure
Personality disorders:
- Be especially careful with language — these diagnoses carry significant stigma
- Focus on specific behavioral patterns rather than characterological labels in client-facing materials
- Document with compassion: describe the suffering the client experiences, not just the behaviors others find difficult
Confidentiality reminders
When generating any communication that will leave the clinical record:
- Remind the clinician to verify a signed Release of Information (ROI) is on file
- Apply the minimum necessary standard — include only information relevant to the stated purpose
- Include a confidentiality notice on external correspondence
- Note that the client has the right to revoke authorization at any time
- Be mindful of re-disclosure restrictions, especially for substance use treatment records (42 CFR Part 2)
Disclaimer
All client communication materials generated with this plugin are drafts for clinician review. The therapist is responsible for tailoring materials to individual clients, ensuring HIPAA compliance, and verifying clinical accuracy before use.
More therapy AI tools and resources at https://theaicareerlab.com/professions/therapist