treatment-plans

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Generate concise (3-4 page), focused medical treatment plans in LaTeX/PDF format for all clinical specialties. Supports general medical treatment, rehabilitation therapy, mental health care, chronic disease management, perioperative care, and pain management. Includes SMART goal frameworks, evidence-based interventions with minimal text citations, regulatory compliance (HIPAA), and professional formatting. Prioritizes brevity and clinical actionability.

Zaoqu-Liu By Zaoqu-Liu schedule Updated 3/7/2026

name: treatment-plans description: Generate concise (3-4 page), focused medical treatment plans in LaTeX/PDF format for all clinical specialties. Supports general medical treatment, rehabilitation therapy, mental health care, chronic disease management, perioperative care, and pain management. Includes SMART goal frameworks, evidence-based interventions with minimal text citations, regulatory compliance (HIPAA), and professional formatting. Prioritizes brevity and clinical actionability. allowed-tools: [Read, Write, Edit, Bash] license: MIT license metadata: skill-author: K-Dense Inc.


Treatment Plan Writing

Overview

Treatment plan writing is the systematic documentation of clinical care strategies designed to address patient health conditions through evidence-based interventions, measurable goals, and structured follow-up. This skill provides comprehensive LaTeX templates and validation tools for creating concise, focused treatment plans (3-4 pages standard) across all medical specialties with full regulatory compliance.

Critical Principles:

  1. CONCISE & ACTIONABLE: Treatment plans default to 3-4 pages maximum, focusing only on clinically essential information that impacts care decisions
  2. Patient-Centered: Plans must be evidence-based, measurable, and compliant with healthcare regulations (HIPAA, documentation standards)
  3. Minimal Citations: Use brief in-text citations only when needed to support clinical recommendations; avoid extensive bibliographies

Every treatment plan should include clear goals, specific interventions, defined timelines, monitoring parameters, and expected outcomes that align with patient preferences and current clinical guidelines - all presented as efficiently as possible.

When to Use This Skill

This skill should be used when:

  • Creating individualized treatment plans for patient care
  • Documenting therapeutic interventions for chronic disease management
  • Developing rehabilitation programs (physical therapy, occupational therapy, cardiac rehab)
  • Writing mental health and psychiatric treatment plans
  • Planning perioperative and surgical care pathways
  • Establishing pain management protocols
  • Setting patient-centered goals using SMART criteria
  • Coordinating multidisciplinary care across specialties
  • Ensuring regulatory compliance in treatment documentation
  • Generating professional treatment plans for medical records

Document Format and Best Practices

Document Length Options

Treatment plans come in three format options based on clinical complexity and use case:

Option 1: One-Page Treatment Plan (PREFERRED for most cases)

When to use: Straightforward clinical scenarios, standard protocols, busy clinical settings

Format: Single page containing all essential treatment information in scannable sections

  • No table of contents needed
  • No extensive narratives
  • Focused on actionable items only
  • Similar to precision oncology reports or treatment recommendation cards

Required sections (all on one page):

  1. Header Box: Patient info, diagnosis, date, molecular/risk profile if applicable
  2. Treatment Regimen: Numbered list of specific interventions
  3. Supportive Care: Brief bullet points
  4. Rationale: 1-2 sentence justification (optional for standard protocols)
  5. Monitoring: Key parameters and frequency
  6. Evidence Level: Guideline reference or evidence grade (e.g., "Level 1, FDA approved")
  7. Expected Outcome: Timeline and success metrics

Design principles:

  • Use small boxes/tables for organization (like the clinical treatment recommendation card format)
  • Eliminate all non-essential text
  • Use abbreviations familiar to clinicians
  • Dense information layout - maximize information per square inch
  • Think "quick reference card" not "comprehensive documentation"

Example structure:

[Patient ID/Diagnosis Box at top]

TARGET PATIENT POPULATION
  Number of patients, demographics, key features

PRIMARY TREATMENT REGIMEN
  • Medication 1: dose, frequency, duration
  • Procedure: specific details
  • Monitoring: what and when

SUPPORTIVE CARE
  • Key supportive medications

RATIONALE
  Brief clinical justification

MOLECULAR TARGETS / RISK FACTORS
  Relevant biomarkers or risk stratification

EVIDENCE LEVEL
  Guideline reference, trial data

MONITORING REQUIREMENTS
  Key labs/vitals, frequency

EXPECTED CLINICAL BENEFIT
  Primary endpoint, timeline

Option 2: Standard 3-4 Page Format

When to use: Moderate complexity, need for patient education materials, multidisciplinary coordination

Uses the Foundation Medicine first-page summary model with 2-3 additional pages of details.

Option 3: Extended 5-6 Page Format

When to use: Complex comorbidities, research protocols, extensive safety monitoring required

First Page Summary (Foundation Medicine Model)

CRITICAL REQUIREMENT: All treatment plans MUST have a complete executive summary on the first page ONLY, before any table of contents or detailed sections.

Following the Foundation Medicine model for precision medicine reporting and clinical summary documents, treatment plans begin with a one-page executive summary that provides immediate access to key actionable information. This entire summary must fit on the first page.

Required First Page Structure (in order):

  1. Title and Subtitle

    • Main title: Treatment plan type (e.g., "Comprehensive Treatment Plan")
    • Subtitle: Specific condition or focus (e.g., "Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus - Young Adult Patient")
  2. Report Information Box (using \begin{infobox} or \begin{patientinfo})

    • Report type/document purpose
    • Date of plan creation
    • Patient demographics (age, sex, de-identified)
    • Primary diagnosis with ICD-10 code
    • Report author/clinic (if applicable)
    • Analysis approach or framework used
  3. Key Findings or Treatment Highlights (2-4 colored boxes using appropriate box types)

    • Primary Treatment Goals (using \begin{goalbox})
      • 2-3 SMART goals in bullet format
    • Main Interventions (using \begin{keybox} or \begin{infobox})
      • 2-3 key interventions (pharmacological, non-pharmacological, monitoring)
    • Critical Decision Points (using \begin{warningbox} if urgent)
      • Important monitoring thresholds or safety considerations
    • Timeline Overview (using \begin{infobox})
      • Brief treatment duration/phases
      • Key milestone dates

Visual Format Requirements:

  • Use \thispagestyle{empty} to remove page numbers from first page
  • All content must fit on page 1 (before \newpage)
  • Use colored boxes (tcolorbox package) with different colors for different information types
  • Boxes should be visually prominent and easy to scan
  • Use concise, bullet-point format
  • Table of contents (if included) starts on page 2
  • Detailed sections start on page 3

Example First Page Structure:

\maketitle
\thispagestyle{empty}

% Report Information Box
\begin{patientinfo}
  Report Type, Date, Patient Info, Diagnosis, etc.
\end{patientinfo}

% Key Finding #1: Treatment Goals
\begin{goalbox}[Primary Treatment Goals]
  • Goal 1
  • Goal 2
  • Goal 3
\end{goalbox}

% Key Finding #2: Main Interventions
\begin{keybox}[Core Interventions]
  • Intervention 1
  • Intervention 2
  • Intervention 3
\end{keybox}

% Key Finding #3: Critical Monitoring (if applicable)
\begin{warningbox}[Critical Decision Points]
  • Decision point 1
  • Decision point 2
\end{warningbox}

\newpage
\tableofcontents  % TOC on page 2
\newpage  % Detailed content starts page 3

Concise Documentation

CRITICAL: Treatment plans MUST prioritize brevity and clinical relevance. Default to 3-4 pages maximum unless clinical complexity absolutely demands more detail.

Treatment plans should prioritize clarity and actionability over exhaustive detail:

  • Focused: Include only clinically essential information that impacts care decisions
  • Actionable: Emphasize what needs to be done, when, and why
  • Efficient: Facilitate quick decision-making without sacrificing clinical quality
  • Target length options:
    • 1-page format (preferred for straightforward cases): Quick-reference card with all essential information
    • 3-4 pages standard: Standard format with first-page summary + supporting details
    • 5-6 pages (rare): Only for highly complex cases with multiple comorbidities or multidisciplinary interventions

Streamlining Guidelines:

  • First Page Summary: Use individual colored boxes to consolidate key information (goals, interventions, decision points) - this alone can often convey the essential treatment plan
  • Eliminate Redundancy: If information is in the first-page summary, don't repeat it verbatim in detailed sections
  • Patient Education section: 3-5 key bullet points on critical topics and warning signs only
  • Risk Mitigation section: Highlight only critical medication safety concerns and emergency actions (not exhaustive lists)
  • Expected Outcomes section: 2-3 concise statements on anticipated responses and timelines
  • Interventions: Focus on primary interventions; secondary/supportive measures in brief bullet format
  • Use tables and bullet points extensively for efficient presentation
  • Avoid narrative prose where structured lists suffice
  • Combine related sections when appropriate to reduce page count

Quality Over Quantity

The goal is professional, clinically complete documentation that respects clinicians' time while ensuring comprehensive patient care. Every section should add value; remove or condense sections that don't directly inform treatment decisions.

Citations and Evidence Support

Use minimal, targeted citations to support clinical recommendations:

  • Text Citations Preferred: Use brief in-text citations (Author Year) or simple references rather than extensive bibliographies unless specifically requested
  • When to Cite:
    • Clinical practice guideline recommendations (e.g., "per ADA 2024 guidelines")
    • Specific medication dosing or protocols (e.g., "ACC/AHA recommendations")
    • Novel or controversial interventions requiring evidence support
    • Risk stratification tools or validated assessment scales
  • When NOT to Cite:
    • Standard-of-care interventions widely accepted in the field
    • Basic medical facts and routine clinical practices
    • General patient education content
  • Citation Format:
    • Inline: "Initiate metformin as first-line therapy (ADA Standards of Care 2024)"
    • Minimal: "Treatment follows ACC/AHA heart failure guidelines"
    • Avoid formal numbered references and extensive bibliography sections unless document is for academic/research purposes
  • Keep it Brief: A 3-4 page treatment plan should have 0-3 citations maximum, only where essential for clinical credibility or novel recommendations

Core Capabilities

1. General Medical Treatment Plans

General medical treatment plans address common chronic conditions and acute medical issues requiring structured therapeutic interventions.

Standard Components

Patient Information (De-identified)

  • Demographics (age, sex, relevant medical background)
  • Active medical conditions and comorbidities
  • Current medications and allergies
  • Relevant social and family history
  • Functional status and baseline assessments
  • HIPAA Compliance: Remove all 18 identifiers per Safe Harbor method

Diagnosis and Assessment Summary

  • Primary diagnosis with ICD-10 code
  • Secondary diagnoses and comorbidities
  • Severity classification and staging
  • Functional limitations and quality of life impact
  • Risk stratification (e.g., cardiovascular risk, fall risk)
  • Prognostic indicators

Treatment Goals (SMART Format)

Short-term goals (1-3 months):

  • Specific: Clearly defined outcome (e.g., "Reduce HbA1c to <7%")
  • Measurable: Quantifiable metrics (e.g., "Decrease systolic BP by 10 mmHg")
  • Achievable: Realistic given patient capabilities
  • Relevant: Aligned with patient priorities and values
  • Time-bound: Specific timeframe (e.g., "within 8 weeks")

Long-term goals (6-12 months):

  • Disease control or remission targets
  • Functional improvement objectives
  • Quality of life enhancement
  • Prevention of complications
  • Maintenance of independence

Interventions

Pharmacological:

  • Medications with specific dosages, routes, frequencies
  • Titration schedules and target doses
  • Drug-drug interaction considerations
  • Monitoring for adverse effects
  • Medication reconciliation

Non-pharmacological:

  • Lifestyle modifications (diet, exercise, smoking cessation)
  • Behavioral interventions
  • Patient education and self-management
  • Monitoring and self-tracking (glucose, blood pressure, weight)
  • Assistive devices or adaptive equipment

Procedural:

  • Planned procedures or interventions
  • Referrals to specialists
  • Diagnostic testing schedule
  • Preventive care (vaccinations, screenings)

Timeline and Schedule

  • Treatment phases with specific timeframes
  • Appointment frequency (weekly, monthly, quarterly)
  • Milestone assessments and goal evaluations
  • Medication adjustments schedule
  • Expected duration of treatment

Monitoring Parameters

  • Clinical outcomes to track (vital signs, lab values, symptoms)
  • Assessment tools and scales (e.g., PHQ-9, pain scales)
  • Frequency of monitoring
  • Thresholds for intervention or escalation
  • Patient-reported outcomes

Expected Outcomes

  • Primary outcome measures
  • Success criteria and benchmarks
  • Expected timeline for improvement
  • Criteria for treatment modification
  • Long-term prognosis

Follow-up Plan

  • Scheduled appointments and reassessments
  • Communication plan (phone calls, secure messaging)
  • Emergency contact procedures
  • Criteria for urgent evaluation
  • Transition or discharge planning

Patient Education

  • Understanding of condition and treatment rationale
  • Self-management skills training
  • Medication administration and adherence
  • Warning signs and when to seek help
  • Resources and support services

Risk Mitigation

  • Potential adverse effects and management
  • Drug interactions and contraindications
  • Fall prevention, infection prevention
  • Emergency action plans
  • Safety monitoring

Common Applications

  • Diabetes mellitus management
  • Hypertension control
  • Heart failure treatment
  • COPD management
  • Asthma care plans
  • Hyperlipidemia treatment
  • Osteoarthritis management
  • Chronic kidney disease

2. Rehabilitation Treatment Plans

Rehabilitation plans focus on restoring function, improving mobility, and enhancing quality of life through structured therapeutic programs.

Core Components

Functional Assessment

  • Baseline functional status (ADLs, IADLs)
  • Range of motion, strength, balance, endurance
  • Gait analysis and mobility assessment
  • Standardized measures (FIM, Barthel Index, Berg Balance Scale)
  • Environmental assessment (home safety, accessibility)

Rehabilitation Goals

Impairment-level goals:

  • Improve shoulder flexion to 140 degrees
  • Increase quadriceps strength by 2/5 MMT grades
  • Enhance balance (Berg Score >45/56)

Activity-level goals:

  • Independent ambulation 150 feet with assistive device
  • Climb 12 stairs with handrail supervision
  • Transfer bed-to-chair independently

Participation-level goals:

  • Return to work with modifications
  • Resume recreational activities
  • Independent community mobility

Therapeutic Interventions

Physical Therapy:

  • Therapeutic exercises (strengthening, stretching, endurance)
  • Manual therapy techniques
  • Gait training and balance activities
  • Modalities (heat, ice, electrical stimulation, ultrasound)
  • Assistive device training

Occupational Therapy:

  • ADL training (bathing, dressing, grooming, feeding)
  • Upper extremity strengthening and coordination
  • Adaptive equipment and modifications
  • Energy conservation techniques
  • Cognitive rehabilitation

Speech-Language Pathology:

  • Swallowing therapy and dysphagia management
  • Communication strategies and augmentative devices
  • Cognitive-linguistic therapy
  • Voice therapy

Other Services:

  • Recreational therapy
  • Aquatic therapy
  • Cardiac rehabilitation
  • Pulmonary rehabilitation
  • Vestibular rehabilitation

Treatment Schedule

  • Frequency: 3x/week PT, 2x/week OT (example)
  • Session duration: 45-60 minutes
  • Treatment phase durations (acute, subacute, maintenance)
  • Expected total duration: 8-12 weeks
  • Reassessment intervals

Progress Monitoring

  • Weekly functional assessments
  • Standardized outcome measures
  • Goal attainment scaling
  • Pain and symptom tracking
  • Patient satisfaction

Home Exercise Program

  • Specific exercises with repetitions/sets/frequency
  • Precautions and safety instructions
  • Progression criteria
  • Self-monitoring strategies

Specialty Rehabilitation

  • Post-stroke rehabilitation
  • Orthopedic rehabilitation (joint replacement, fracture)
  • Cardiac rehabilitation (post-MI, post-surgery)
  • Pulmonary rehabilitation
  • Vestibular rehabilitation
  • Neurological rehabilitation
  • Sports injury rehabilitation

3. Mental Health Treatment Plans

Mental health treatment plans address psychiatric conditions through integrated psychotherapeutic, pharmacological, and psychosocial interventions.

Essential Components

Psychiatric Assessment

  • Primary psychiatric diagnosis (DSM-5 criteria)
  • Symptom severity and functional impairment
  • Co-occurring mental health conditions
  • Substance use assessment
  • Suicide/homicide risk assessment
  • Trauma history and PTSD screening
  • Social determinants of mental health

Treatment Goals

Symptom reduction:

  • Decrease depression severity (PHQ-9 score from 18 to <10)
  • Reduce anxiety symptoms (GAD-7 score <5)
  • Improve sleep quality (Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index)
  • Stabilize mood (reduced mood episodes)

Functional improvement:

  • Return to work or school
  • Improve social relationships and support
  • Enhance coping skills and emotional regulation
  • Increase engagement in meaningful activities

Recovery-oriented goals:

  • Build resilience and self-efficacy
  • Develop crisis management skills
  • Establish sustainable wellness routines
  • Achieve personal recovery goals

Therapeutic Interventions

Psychotherapy:

  • Evidence-based modality (CBT, DBT, ACT, psychodynamic, IPT)
  • Session frequency (weekly, biweekly)
  • Treatment duration (12-16 weeks, ongoing)
  • Specific techniques and targets
  • Group therapy participation

Psychopharmacology:

  • Medication class and rationale
  • Starting dose and titration schedule
  • Target symptoms
  • Expected response timeline (2-4 weeks for antidepressants)
  • Side effect monitoring
  • Combination therapy considerations

Psychosocial Interventions:

  • Case management services
  • Peer support programs
  • Family therapy or psychoeducation
  • Vocational rehabilitation
  • Supported housing or community integration
  • Substance abuse treatment

Safety Planning

  • Crisis contacts and emergency services
  • Warning signs and triggers
  • Coping strategies and self-soothing techniques
  • Safe environment modifications
  • Means restriction (firearms, medications)
  • Support system activation

Monitoring and Assessment

  • Symptom rating scales (weekly or biweekly)
  • Medication adherence and side effects
  • Suicidal ideation screening
  • Functional status assessments
  • Treatment engagement and therapeutic alliance

Patient and Family Education

  • Psychoeducation about diagnosis
  • Treatment rationale and expectations
  • Medication information
  • Relapse prevention strategies
  • Community resources

Mental Health Conditions

  • Major depressive disorder
  • Anxiety disorders (GAD, panic, social anxiety)
  • Bipolar disorder
  • Schizophrenia and psychotic disorders
  • PTSD and trauma-related disorders
  • Eating disorders
  • Substance use disorders
  • Personality disorders

4. Chronic Disease Management Plans

Comprehensive long-term care plans for chronic conditions requiring ongoing monitoring, treatment adjustments, and multidisciplinary coordination.

Key Features

Disease-Specific Targets

  • Evidence-based treatment goals per guidelines
  • Stage-appropriate interventions
  • Complication prevention strategies
  • Disease progression monitoring

Self-Management Support

  • Patient activation and engagement
  • Shared decision-making
  • Action plans for symptom changes
  • Technology-enabled monitoring (apps, remote monitoring)

Care Coordination

  • Primary care physician oversight
  • Specialist consultations and co-management
  • Care transitions (hospital to home)
  • Medication management across providers
  • Communication protocols

Population Health Integration

  • Registry tracking and outreach
  • Preventive care and screening schedules
  • Quality measure reporting
  • Care gaps identification

Applicable Conditions

  • Type 1 and Type 2 diabetes
  • Cardiovascular disease (CHF, CAD)
  • Chronic respiratory diseases (COPD, asthma)
  • Chronic kidney disease
  • Inflammatory bowel disease
  • Rheumatoid arthritis and autoimmune conditions
  • HIV/AIDS
  • Cancer survivorship care

5. Perioperative Care Plans

Structured plans for surgical and procedural patients covering preoperative preparation, intraoperative management, and postoperative recovery.

Components

Preoperative Assessment

  • Surgical indication and planned procedure
  • Preoperative risk stratification (ASA class, cardiac risk)
  • Optimization of medical conditions
  • Medication management (continuation, discontinuation)
  • Preoperative testing and clearances
  • Informed consent and patient education

Perioperative Interventions

  • Enhanced recovery after surgery (ERAS) protocols
  • Venous thromboembolism prophylaxis
  • Antibiotic prophylaxis
  • Glycemic control strategies
  • Pain management plan (multimodal analgesia)

Postoperative Care

  • Immediate recovery goals (24-48 hours)
  • Early mobilization protocols
  • Diet advancement
  • Wound care and drain management
  • Pain control regimen
  • Complication monitoring

Discharge Planning

  • Activity restrictions and progression
  • Medication reconciliation
  • Follow-up appointments
  • Home health or rehabilitation services
  • Return-to-work timeline

6. Pain Management Plans

Multimodal approaches to acute and chronic pain using evidence-based interventions and opioid-sparing strategies.

Comprehensive Components

Pain Assessment

  • Pain location, quality, intensity (0-10 scale)
  • Temporal pattern (constant, intermittent, breakthrough)
  • Aggravating and alleviating factors
  • Functional impact (sleep, activities, mood)
  • Previous treatments and responses
  • Psychosocial contributors

Multimodal Interventions

Pharmacological:

  • Non-opioid analgesics (acetaminophen, NSAIDs)
  • Adjuvant medications (antidepressants, anticonvulsants, muscle relaxants)
  • Topical agents (lidocaine, capsaicin, diclofenac)
  • Opioid therapy (when appropriate, with risk mitigation)
  • Titration and rotation strategies

Interventional Procedures:

  • Nerve blocks and injections
  • Radiofrequency ablation
  • Spinal cord stimulation
  • Intrathecal drug delivery

Non-pharmacological:

  • Physical therapy and exercise
  • Cognitive-behavioral therapy for pain
  • Mindfulness and relaxation techniques
  • Acupuncture
  • TENS units

Opioid Safety (when prescribed)

  • Indication and planned duration
  • Prescription drug monitoring program (PDMP) check
  • Opioid risk assessment tools
  • Naloxone prescription
  • Treatment agreements
  • Random urine drug screening
  • Frequent follow-up and reassessment

Functional Goals

  • Specific activity improvements
  • Sleep quality enhancement
  • Reduced pain interference
  • Improved quality of life
  • Return to work or meaningful activities

Extended Reference: For detailed tool tables, examples, and templates, read REFERENCE.md in this skill directory. The agent can access it via: read skills/treatment-plans/REFERENCE.md

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npx skills add https://github.com/Zaoqu-Liu/ScienceClaw --skill treatment-plans
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