Clinical: Patient Education - yina/2025-catalyzing-health-promptathon GitHub Wiki

Thank you to obgyn for this example.

Tasks

Type Example
Summarization Create a summary of this discharge summary to send to the patient's outpatient primary care physician.
Extraction Extract all the diagnoses that were relevant to the patient's stay in the hospital.
Verification Verify that a follow-up appointment with the patient's outpatient physician was established.
Classification Determine how patient-friendly this document is. What reading level is this written for?
Transformation Have the AI create a patient and family-friendly version of this discharge summary that can be given to the patient.
Generation Have the AI make recommendations on what is missing from the discharge summary, and what additional information would make it more complete and helpful.

Example

Sample text to use in your prompt. Copy and paste this into the prompt you write in the GPT:

ADMITTING DIAGNOSIS: Preeclampsia superimposed on chronic hypertension and chronic renal insufficiency.

DISCHARGE DIAGNOSIS: Preeclampsia superimposed on chronic hypertension and chronic renal insufficiency, status post-cesarean delivery.

PROCEDURES: Cesarean section by primary low segment transverse incision at 30+3 weeks gestation for maternal deterioration due to preeclampsia.
HISTORY OF PRESENT ILLNESS: Mrs. J. Smith, a 32-year-old female at 30+3 weeks gestation, presented with severe headaches, 3+ pitting edema in her extremities, and elevated blood pressure (158/105 mmHg). Initial evaluation revealed proteinuria (3+), mild anemia (hemoglobin 10.5 g/dL), thrombocytopenia (platelets 120,000/µL), and serum creatinine of 1.2 mg/dL consistent with her baseline. Lupus markers were stable, and fetal assessment was reassuring upon admission. Due to clinical deterioration and progression of preeclampsia remote from term, the decision for expedited delivery via cesarean section was made.

MEDICATIONS:
1.	Labetalol 200 mg twice daily
2.	Magnesium sulfate: completed
3.	Hydroxychloroquine 200 mg daily
4.	Prednisone 5 mg daily
5.	Sumatriptan 50 mg as needed

ALLERGIES: None.
SOCIAL HISTORY: Married, employed as a teacher. Denies smoking, alcohol, or drug use.
PHYSICAL EXAMINATION: Blood pressure was 158/105 mmHg on admission. Facial puffiness and 3+ pitting edema in hands and feet were noted. No abdominal tenderness or visual disturbances. Renal function remained at baseline, and lupus markers showed no signs of active disease. Fetal heart rate tracing was reassuring prior to delivery.

LABORATORY:
1.	Hemoglobin: 10.5 g/dL (mild anemia)
2.	Platelets: 120,000/µL (thrombocytopenia)
3.	Proteinuria: 3+
4.	Serum creatinine: 1.2 mg/dL (consistent with baseline)
5.	Liver enzymes: Normal

HOSPITAL COURSE: Mrs. Smith's condition required management with IV labetalol for blood pressure control and magnesium sulfate for seizure prophylaxis. Fetal well-being was monitored daily via non-stress tests and ultrasounds. Due to worsening maternal preeclampsia remote from term, she underwent cesarean delivery via primary low segment transverse incision at 30+3 weeks gestation. A viable male infant weighing 1500 grams was delivered with Apgar scores of 6 and 8 at 1 and 5 minutes, respectively. Postoperatively, her blood pressure stabilized on oral labetalol, and magnesium sulfate was continued for 24 hours. Renal function remained stable, and SLE markers showed no evidence of active disease. Counseling on postpartum care and future pregnancy risks was provided.

DISCHARGE MEDICATIONS:
1.	Labetalol 200 mg twice daily
2.	Hydroxychloroquine 200 mg daily
3.	Prednisone 5 mg daily
4.	Sumatriptan 50 mg as needed

DISCHARGE INSTRUCTIONS:
1.	Continue prescribed antihypertensives and monitor blood pressure daily. Remote patient monitoring (RPM) will be utilized for home blood pressure surveillance.
2.	Report any severe symptoms of postpartum hypertension (e.g., headaches, visual changes, or swelling).
3.	Follow up with the primary obstetrician in 1 week for a blood pressure check and postpartum evaluation.
4.	Follow up with nephrology and rheumatology within 1 month to evaluate renal function and ongoing SLE management.
5.	Maintain lupus medications and attend follow-up with rheumatology.
6.	The infant remains in NICU care; parents should stay in contact with the NICU team for updates and care instructions.