Prompt: PCOS Patient Education Document
A ready-to-use prompt for generating a balanced, reassuring patient education document about PCOS — tailored to the patient's main concern.
Prompt: PCOS Patient Education Document
Use this prompt to generate a patient education document about PCOS (polycystic ovary syndrome) tailored to a patient's specific concern. Replace the items in {{double curly brackets}} with your own details.
Never paste real patient names, dates of birth, NHS numbers, or any other identifying information into an AI tool.
The Prompt
Write a patient education document about PCOS (polycystic ovary syndrome) for a {{patient_age}}-year-old woman who has been recently diagnosed. She has concerns particularly about {{main_concern — e.g. "fertility", "long-term health risks", "weight", or "the excess hair growth she has noticed"}}.
Cover:
1. What PCOS is and what causes it — in plain language
2. Why symptoms vary so much between individuals with the same diagnosis
3. The lifestyle factors that can influence symptoms and overall health over time
4. What regular monitoring for PCOS typically involves — in general terms, not specific tests or intervals
5. A reassuring, honest note about long-term outlook
Around 350 words. Plain English. Short paragraphs. Warm tone. No specific drug names, doses, or fertility treatment options.
Why This Works
PCOS has enormous individual variation and is surrounded by a lot of anxiety-inducing content online. A clear explanation focused on what the patient can influence — lifestyle, monitoring, long-term health — gives her a more useful framework. Tailoring the concern field means the document speaks to what is actually worrying her, not a generic overview.
How to Tweak It
- Remove the fertility focus entirely by changing the main concern to "metabolic health" and adding "She is not currently planning a pregnancy" if the consultation priority is metabolic management.
- Add
"She has expressed concern about something she read online about {{specific_concern or myth}} — please address this directly and provide a balanced perspective"to counter a specific piece of misinformation she has encountered.
Remember: AI is a helpful assistant, not a clinician. You make the call.
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