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Explore Health AI Prompts
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AI Tool:
Steroid course Table
L
by
Lindsey Knake
Make a table with all the steroid courses this patient has received and make a table for how many days and associated reasons for steroids in the notes. Add to the table any history in the note for reason for treatment. Add the dates of treatment to separate column on the table but exclude ones that have a treatment duration of 0.
Specialty:
Pediatric Medicine
AI Tool:
Evidently
2
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Antibiotic Table and Indication
L
by
Lindsey Knake
Make a table with all the antibiotic courses this patient has received and make a table for how many days and results of a assocaited with this antibiotic course either in the notes or lab results. Add to the table any history in the note for reason for treatment. Add the dates of treatment to separate column on the table but exclude ones that have a treatment duration of 0.
Specialty:
Pediatric Medicine
AI Tool:
Evidently
2
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Anesthesia-Focused Pre-Op Prompt
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by
Chris Neville
**Role:** You are a senior anesthesia consultant assisting with a preoperative assessment. > **Task:** Review the provided medical history and summarize the key anesthetic implications for the upcoming [Insert Procedure Name]. > **Requirements:** Please organize your findings into the following high-priority categories: > 1. **Airway & Respiratory:** Identify BMI, Mallampati (if noted), history of difficult intubation, OSA (and CPAP use), or reactive airway disease. > 2. **Cardiovascular:** Summarize METS/functional capacity, recent EKG/Echo findings (specifically EF and valvular issues), history of CAD, stents (include dates/types), and HTN control. > 3. **Metabolic & Endocrine:** Highlight DM management (HbA1c, last glucose), renal function (Cr/GFR), and thyroid status. > 4. **Coagulation & Medications:** List all anticoagulants/antiplatelets with last dose taken. Note any GLP-1 agonists (e.g., Ozempic) due to aspiration risk. > 5. **Anesthetic History:** Flag any history of Malignant Hyperthermia, PONV, Include any history of difficult airway or significant adverse reactions to anesthetics, or pseudocholinesterase deficiency. > 6. **Red Flags:** Briefly list the top 3 most critical risks for this specific patient in the perioperative period. > **Patient Data:** [Paste Patient History/Notes Here] If no data exists state so
Specialty:
Anesthesiology
AI Tool:
Evidently
1
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Medical optimization
W
by
Wesley Hall
For this patient and their current medical condition, please optimize their medical management. Please factor in the efficacy of the medications, their interactions with each other, as well as the burden of administration for the patient. The medications should be the gold standard of care where possible. Please create a list of instructions on dosage, method of administration, and a side effect profile for the patient to utilize.
Specialty:
All
AI Tool:
ChatGPT
2
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EMS
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by
Nicholas Cozzi, MD, MBA, FACEP, FAEMS
65 year old female with HTN, HLD, and DM -has utilized EMS 10 times in past 30 days. Summarize her initial evaluation and management
Specialty:
Emergency Medicine
AI Tool:
ChatGPT
2
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Possible Drug Interactions and Susceptible Toxicities
J
by
John Garvey IV
For this patient’s current condition, factoring in all their relevant past medical history as well as ongoing chronic conditions, make a list of medications which would be effective for treating this patient and have a decreased risk of toxicities or interactions with their current medications for the 10 most common hospital-acquired illnesses. Also, make a list of medications which would not be indicated based on the patient’s current medications and conditions due to the increased risk of toxicities or drug-drug interactions, for the same 10 most common hospital acquired illnesses.
Specialty:
Internal Medicine
AI Tool:
Evidently
2
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Medication reconciliation
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by
Abdul Mannan
My patient has heart failure and has recently been seen by cardiologist that is not in our system. Their guideline director medical therapy has been changed. Give me a overview of what medications have been prescribed in the last 24 months.
Specialty:
Internal Medicine
AI Tool:
ChatGPT
2
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Identifying Infection in Organ Transplant Recipients (OTR)
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by
Chris Neville
Systematically review the patient's chart for any data—historical, clinical, or laboratory—that may indicate an active or occult infection, especially given the blunted immune response typical of immunosuppressed patients. Include in search: Organ(s) Transplanted, surgical complications, nosocomial/hospital-acquired infections (SSI, UTI, HAP, C. diff), and donor-derived infections, opportunistic infections (CMV, PCP, Aspergillus, Nocardia, EBV, Toxoplasmosis, Cryptococcus), Community-acquired infections, but also possible late opportunistic infections (CMV, BK virus, Herpes Zoster) and malignancy (PTLD), Immunosuppression Regimen/Changes, Any recent escalations/increases in dose, any recent dose hold or reduction due to toxicity, prophylaxis status: Is the patient currently receiving or has recently completed prophylaxis for CMV (Valganciclovir), PCP (Bactrim), or Fungi (Fluconazole, Rejection History: Any episodes of allograft rejection (acute or chronic) Date and treatment given (especially T-cell depleting agents like ATG). Fever: Highest documented temperature, Vitals: New or worsening tachycardia, tachypnea, or hypotension (qSOFA criteria), Fatigue/Malaise: New, unexplained, or progressive weakness/lethargy, Allograft Dysfunction (Organ-Specific): Look for functional decline, which can be the only sign of infection. Kidney: Decreased urine output, rising creatinine/BUN. Liver: Rising LFTs (AST, ALT, Bilirubin), worsening synthetic function. Lung: New or increased O2 requirement, progressive cough, dyspnea. Heart: Signs of heart failure, new dysrhythmias. Identify the primary site of infection and review the chart for these specific findings: Review most recent Chest X-ray or CT for infiltrates, nodules, or ground-glass opacities (classic for PJP/Viral). Labs: Respiratory viral PCR panel (Flu, RSV, COVID), CMV/EBV PCR. Stool Studies: C. diff toxin PCR, CMV PCR in blood/tissue (if endoscopy performed). Labs: Liver enzymes (if hepatic involvement). Imaging: Review recent MRI/CT Head. Labs: Documented CSF analysis (if LP performed), Cryptococcal Antigen, Toxoplasmosis serology, EBV PCR (for PTLD). Urine: Urinalysis (UA) for pyuria/leukocytes (often subtle). Cultures: Status of Urine Culture & Sensitivity. Labs: BK Virus PCR/Viral Load (Kidney OTR). Cultures: Wound/Drainage Culture & Sensitivity. Labs: Status of Blood Cultures. Imaging: Ultrasound/CT for deep fluid collections (abscess/lymphocele). Leukopenia/Neutropenia: Low white blood cell or neutrophil count (increases susceptibility to bacteria/fungi). Lymphopenia: Low lymphocyte count (<1000/mm³) (indicates T-cell suppression and high risk for viral/opportunistic infections). Infection Surveillance Labs: CMV PCR/Viral Load: Is the patient viremic? What is the trend? (Most common viral opportunistic infection). EBV PCR/Viral Load: Elevated load is a risk factor for PTLD (which presents like an infection). Galactomannan or Beta-D-Glucan: Elevated fungal markers. Immunosuppressant Levels: Trough Levels: Document recent Calcineurin Inhibitor (Tacrolimus/Cyclosporine) trough levels. High levels correlate with higher infection risk. Cultures/Swabs: Status of all pending or recent cultures (Blood, Urine, Sputum, Wound). Any positive results, including the last sensitivity report.
Specialty:
Infectious Disease
AI Tool:
Evidently
0
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Potential Child Abuse or Neglect Deep Search
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by
Chris Neville
Systematically search the patient's electronic medical record (EMR), including all past visit notes, growth charts, injury documentation, and social service history, for documented physical, behavioral, and caregiver red flags that may indicate potential child abuse or neglect. Search criteria should include: multiple fractures, spiral fracture, bucket-handle fracture, rib fracture (especially in non-mobile infants), epiphyseal injury, bruising on non-mobile infant, bruising on torso/ears/neck, patterned bruising (e.g., belt, hand print), discrepancy in dating of bruises, glove-and-stocking burn pattern, immersion burn, circular burns, splash/spill injury, subdural hematoma, retinal hemorrhage, Shaken Baby Syndrome, inconsistent history of fall, failure to thrive, severe malnutrition, untreated illness, missed immunizations/appointments, poor hygiene, extreme aggressiveness, passivity, hyper-vigilance, flat affect, fear of going home, inappropriate sexual knowledge/behavior, child fears physical exam, avoids caregiver eye contact, child flinches at sudden movements or touch, alcohol intoxication, illicit drug exposure, history provided by caregiver is inconsistent, injury mechanism does not match severity, caregiver delays seeking care, caregiver indifferent to child's pain, overly demanding/critical of child, caregiver reluctant to leave child alone, CPS involvement, protective services, child removed from home, documented family violence, domestic violence, few social contacts, family moves frequently, no available babysitters/support system
Specialty:
Emergency Medicine
AI Tool:
Evidently
0
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Opioid Use Disorder Deep Search
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by
Chris Neville
Systematically review the patient's electronic medical record (EMR) for any information related to potential Opioid Use Disorder (OUD), high-risk factors, or contraindications for initiating or continuing opioid therapy. This search should include all progress notes, problem lists, medication history, and prescription monitoring data. Additionally, review the last 12 months of Prescription Monitoring Program (PMP) data, specifically checking for the following high-risk indicators: - Overlapping Opioid Prescriptions: Note instances where the patient received overlapping opioid prescriptions, particularly from multiple prescribers. - Concurrent Prescriptions: Identify concurrent prescriptions for opioids and benzodiazepines or other sedatives. - Refill Patterns: Examine refill patterns, noting any consistently early refills or significant gaps between refills. - Daily Morphine Milligram Equivalent (MME): Calculate the daily MME level and flag any instance where the dosage is consistently above the high-risk threshold of 50 MME/day.
Specialty:
Emergency Medicine
AI Tool:
Evidently
0
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Safe for Surgery: a prompt to evaluate a patient prior to surgery
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by
Ken Nepple, MD FACS
Required output of this prompt is a table. Create a summary TABLE of major comorbidities that could impact the ability to safely get through a surgery. Start with a heading on "Anticoagulation" which includes any anticoagulation, and if on anticoagulation then state duration and indication and put the drug in red font color and in bold. Then also include sections on "Cardiac" and "Pulmonary". Always include a section on "30 day type/screen" lab and if result available then report that along with the specific date and the expiration date and if type/screen test is positive for antibodies then put that in bold and red, but if no result then say "not available". Include if a patient is on GLP-1 medication, and if present then report "yes" in bold font and red font color and include the name of GLP-1 medication. Also include a section "Results Reviewed" including the most recent results of CBC and chem6 and UA/micro and urine culture and EKG and chest imaging (either most recent CXR or chest CT), and put any abnormal results in red font and bold font. Add any other relevant sections. If there are no significant comorbidities then can state that "No significant medical comorbidities identified". At the bottom, look at the medication list and identify any "high risk" medications that would require special management like immunosuppressants or other medications that could need special management around surgery. At the very bottom, add a short section on the planned date and type of procedure (if that can be identified).
Specialty:
Urology
AI Tool:
Evidently
4
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OB-GYN Initial Patient Assessment: Endometriosis Focus
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by
Sarah Kreik
You are a highly skilled and efficient OB-GYN specialist. You need to synthesize a new patient's history into a comprehensive, quick-reference summary, with a specific focus on identifying potential indicators of Endometriosis. Generate a structured, prioritized, and concise summary of the patient's history. Crucially, evaluate and report on the likelihood and symptoms consistent with Endometriosis by indicating whether each part of the patient's history is: "Strongly suggestive of Endometriosis" / "Possible Endometriosis, further workup needed" / "No strong indicators of Endometriosis."
Specialty:
Obstetrics Gynecology
AI Tool:
Evidently
5
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Behavioral Health New Admit Chart Prep
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by
Alexa Melhado
You are an intake coordinator at an acute psychiatric hospital within a major health system in which this newly-admitting patient has received numerous medical services over the last decade. Please show all mental health-related notes and summaries for this patient.
Specialty:
Psychiatry
AI Tool:
Evidently
4
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Pre-Op X-Ray Search
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by
Alexa Melhado
Please find all x-rays related to the patient's wrist issues to prepare for surgery tomorrow.
Specialty:
Orthopedic Surgery
AI Tool:
Evidently
2
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Nephrology Hand-Off
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by
Mara Olson
You are an expert nephrologist handing off care to a colleague. Summarize the patient’s renal disease in concise bullets: diagnoses, labs (abnormal in red), imaging, and treatments.
Specialty:
Nephrology
AI Tool:
Evidently
11
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Pediatric Wellness Checks
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by
Mara Olson
You are a skilled pediatrician. Create a concise summary for each well-child encounter. For patients aged 0–2 years, include what the child is drinking, how often, and how much (e.g., ‘She drinks 6 oz of expressed breast milk every 3–4 hours during the day and nurses for 15 minutes every 4–6 hours at night.’). For patients aged 12 months or younger, also indicate whether they are receiving vitamin D or poly-vi-sol (PVS) with iron.
Specialty:
Pediatric Medicine
AI Tool:
Evidently
6
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Transplant Quality
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by
Chris Cowart
You are a transplant quality review coordinator screening for critical care status screening. For the transplant waitlist patient currently in critical care, I require a concise summary of the active intensive support measures. Inotropic/Vasoactive Support: List the names of all continuous inotropic infusions (e.g., Dobutamine, Milrinone). List the names of all continuous vasopressor infusions (e.g., Norepinephrine, Dopamine). Indicate if the patient is on >= 2 vasoactive drips (Inotropes + Vasopressors). Mechanical Support Status: Is the patient on ECMO? If yes, specify VA or VV and the date of initiation. Is the patient on any other Mechanical Circulatory Support (MCS) device (e.g., IABP, VAD)? If yes, name the device. Respiratory Status: Is the patient currently on invasive mechanical ventilation (intubated)? State Yes or No. Indicate if the patient is on greater than 2 vasoactive drips (Inotropes + Vasopressors). Key Organ Support: Is the patient currently receiving Renal Replacement Therapy (RRT) (e.g., CRRT or IHD)? State Yes or No. What is the most recent Serum Creatinine and Lactate level?
Specialty:
Cardiothoracic Transplant General
AI Tool:
Gemini
3
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5Ms for geriatric care
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by
Kalie Dove-Maguire, MD
"You are a clinical geriatric specialist reviewing a complex patient's electronic health record (EHR). Your task is to generate a highly granular, actionable, and brief clinical summary using the '5 Ms' framework. This summary is intended for a busy attending clinician or resident preparing for an encounter. For each 'M', you must review all available chart data (e.g., vital signs, problem lists, medication history, notes, screening tests) and extract the most clinically pertinent positive and negative findings that fall within that category. Present the output as a structured table for immediate clinical reference. M Core Clinical Issue/Focus Pertinent Chart Data (Positive/Negative Findings) Action/Next Step Minds Cognitive Status (Dementia, Delirium, Depression) [Extract data here: e.g., MoCA score, recent GDS-15, documented history of delirium, acute mental status changes] [Suggest action: e.g., Re-screen with PHQ-2, Neurology referral, Review recent labs for infectious/metabolic cause] Mobility Functional Status, Falls Risk, Gait [Extract data here: e.g., Falls history (frequency, date), TUG score/Gait speed, documented weakness/assistive device use, recent fracture] [Suggest action: e.g., Order Bone Density Scan, PT consult for balance training, Evaluate home environment for hazards] Medications Polypharmacy, Appropriateness, Adherence [Extract data here: e.g., Total medication count, documented Beers List drugs (specifically list these), recent adverse drug event (e.g., new sedation), documented adherence issue] [Suggest action: e.g., Perform Comprehensive Deprescribing Review, Check CrCl and adjust renal-dosed meds, Consult pharmacist] Multicomplexity Comorbidities, Care Coordination, Social Determinants [Extract data here: e.g., Number of active chronic conditions, documented Caregiver Strain Index score, recent hospital admissions, food/housing insecurity note] [Suggest action: e.g., Initiate Palliative Care discussion, Refer to Social Work for resources, Coordinate care conference with specialty providers] Matters Most Goals of Care, Values, Priorities [Extract data here: e.g., Documented Code Status (DNR/DNI), last Advance Care Planning discussion date, stated health priorities from most recent note] [Suggest action: e.g., Revisit and clarify goals of care, Ensure medical power of attorney documentation is current, Discuss palliative options] Ensure the extracted data is specific, quantitative where possible, and directly relevant to clinical decision-making."
Specialty:
Emergency Medicine
AI Tool:
Evidently
6
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Ob Gyn Initial Visit Prompt
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by
Kai Romero, MD
You are an an excellent, thorough obstetrician. Write a concise but thorough summary of the following information for this patient. wherever you do not have data, please state so. Additionally, if the GTPAL is 0000 you should list that, though if you don't have any data for GTPAL, state that. History - Gravida/para (GTPAL) - Prior pregnancies, complications, outcomes - Menstrual history (LMP, cycle length, regularity) - Gynecologic history (Pap/HPV, STIs, contraception) - Medical/surgical history--specifically history of c-section - Medications, allergies - Family history (genetic disorders, pregnancy complications) - Social history (tobacco, alcohol, drugs, occupation, IPV screening) Labs (please list dates of labs when possible) - Blood type, Rh factor - Antibody screen - CBC - Rubella IgG - Varicella IgG - Hepatitis X surface Ag - HIV screen - Syphilis (RPR/VDRL) - Urinalysis & urine culture - GC/CT NAAT - TSH (if indicated) - Hb electrophoresis (if at-risk ethnicity/family hx) - HbA1c or early glucose screen if high risk Imaging - First-trimester dating ultrasound (if LMP uncertain, irregular cycles, or high risk) Prenatal vitamins (folic acid) Substance use IETOH, tobacco, drugs) - Genetic screening options (NIPT, first-trimester screen, carrier testing) - Vaccines: flu, COVID (any trimester), and Tdap (3rd trimester)
Specialty:
Emergency Medicine
AI Tool:
Evidently
5
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Create a Bulleted List of Asthma Control
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by
Adam Abbas
You are a pediatric pulmonologist. create a bulleted summary of asthma control since the last clinic visit with me. This includes dates of steroid courses (prednisone, prednisolone, methylpred, and dexamethasone), emergency department visits for breathing issues, urgent care visits for breathing issues, hospitalizations for breathing issues. Also include what inhalers they are prescribed, most recent chest xray results, any chest CT results, any swallow study results, and any flexible bronchoscopy results. Finally, include a social history bullet that includes who is living at home, whether there are smoking or vaping exposures, what pets live in the house, whether they were born at full term, and whether they had any neonatal respiratory issues
Specialty:
Pulmonary Disease
AI Tool:
Evidently
5
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