Use when a user wants to audit a home, car, dorm, travel, or workplace first aid kit for supply readiness, expired items, missing categories, storage labels,...
--- name: Home First Aid Kit Audit Card description: Use when a user wants to audit a home, car, dorm, travel, or workplace first aid kit for supply readiness, expired items, missing categories, storage labels, and restock actions. Produces a printable audit card and replenishment list while avoiding medical treatment advice, medication dosing, or diagnosis. --- # Home First Aid Kit Audit Card ## Purpose Create a practical audit card that helps the user inspect a first aid kit, identify missing or expired supplies, and make the kit easier to find and restock. Keep the work about readiness, storage, labels, and replacement planning. ## Boundaries - This is not medical advice and must not diagnose, triage, or tell the user how to treat an injury. - Do not provide medication dosing, medication selection advice, or instructions for using medicines. - If the user mentions a serious injury, severe bleeding, trouble breathing, suspected poisoning, loss of consciousness, head/neck/spine injury, major burn, chest pain, stroke symptoms, anaphylaxis, or any situation that feels dangerous, tell them to contact local emergency services or urgent medical help immediately. - For household-specific medical needs, tell the user to follow guidance from qualified clinicians, product labels, and local emergency preparedness authorities. - If asked to include medications, limit the output to a neutral tracking row for item name, owner, expiration date, storage note, and who to ask before replacing it. Do not advise whether, when, or how to use it. ## Inputs To Request Ask only for details that improve the audit card: - Kit location and use case: home, car, travel, dorm, workshop, office, sports bag, or other. - Household context that affects supplies: adults, children, older adults, pets, allergies, known clinician-directed emergency items, outdoor work, tools, kitchen, or travel. - Current item list or a photo/text dump if available. - Climate and storage concerns: heat, humidity, freezing, car trunk, bathroom cabinet, garage, or shared building. - Restock preferences: local store, online order, budget cap, compact kit, or printable checklist only. If the user lacks an inventory, guide them to empty the kit onto a clean surface and group items by category. ## Workflow 1. Define the kit mission. - Name where the kit lives, who may use it, and what situations it is meant to support. - Separate home kit, travel kit, car kit, and workplace kit needs when relevant. 2. Sort the contents into readiness categories. - Wound covering: adhesive bandages, sterile gauze, dressings, tape. - Cleaning and barrier items: antiseptic wipes, gloves, hand sanitizer, CPR face shield if present. - Tools: scissors, tweezers, thermometer, instant cold pack, flashlight, notepad, marker. - Wraps and support supplies: elastic bandage, triangular bandage, finger splint, safety pins. - Personal or clinician-directed items: track only presence, owner, expiration, and replacement source. - Documents: emergency contacts, allergy list, kit inventory, local emergency numbers. 3. Check readiness. - Mark each item as ready, low, missing, expired, damaged, opened, unclear, or not appropriate for this kit. - Flag items with damaged packaging, unreadable labels, moisture exposure, heat damage, or missing instructions. - Record expiration dates without recommending medical use. 4. Build the restock card. - List missing and expired items by priority: replace now, restock soon, optional upgrade, ask a professional. - Convert vague gaps into shopping quantities only when the user supplied a preferred kit size or existing checklist. - Keep medicine-related rows as "confirm with clinician/pharmacist or product label" rather than advice. 5. Make the visible kit label. - Include kit location, last audit date, next audit date, emergency number reminder, owner, and restock contact. - Add a short "return borrowed items here" line for shared households. 6. Close with a maintenance rhythm. - Suggest a recurring audit after expiration-heavy seasons, trips, moves, car storage changes, or every 6 to 12 months. - Recommend checking official preparedness resources or local emergency guidance for baseline kit lists. ## Output Format Use this structure by default: ```markdown # First Aid Kit Audit Card ## Kit Snapshot - Kit location: - Kit mission: - People or context considered: - Audit date: - Next check: ## Quick Status - Ready now: - Replace now: - Restock soon: - Unclear or ask a professional: ## Item Audit | Category | Item | Status | Expiration or condition | Action | |---|---|---|---|---| | Wound covering | | | | | | Cleaning and barrier | | | | | | Tools | | | | | | Wraps and support | | | | | | Personal/clinician-directed | | | | Confirm with clinician, pharmacist, product label, or household plan. | | Documents | | | | | ## Restock List | Priority | Item | Why | Replacement note | |---|---|---|---| | Replace now | | | | | Restock soon | | | | | Optional upgrade | | | | | Ask a professional | | | | ## Visible Kit Label - Kit lives at: - Emergency reminder: call local emergency services for serious or dangerous injuries. - Last checked: - Next check: - Restock owner: ## Safety Boundary This audit covers supply readiness only. It does not provide medical treatment instructions, diagnosis, or medication dosing. For serious injuries or dangerous symptoms, seek emergency care immediately. ``` ## Quality Checks Before finishing, verify that the output: - Produces a concrete audit card, restock list, and kit label. - Separates missing, expired, damaged, low, and unclear items. - Keeps medications to tracking only and contains no dosing or treatment instructions. - Escalates serious injuries to emergency care. - Uses plain language suitable for printing or sharing with a household. ## Example Prompts Copy and paste one of these to get started: - "Audit my home first aid kit. I have bandages, antiseptic wipes, expired pain relief, and scattered supplies in a bathroom drawer." - "Check my car first aid kit for summer readiness — it's been baking in the trunk for a year." - "We're restocking the office first aid cabinet. Make an audit card and restock list from scratch."
don't have the plugin yet? install it then click "run inline in claude" again.