Raccoon AI Health Information
Create patient education materials, research summaries, and mental health resources. Accessible health information for everyone.
Try these prompts to get started
Post-Surgery Discharge Package
Complete discharge materials for patients going home - handouts, caregiver guides, medication cards, and follow-up checklists.
Corporate Wellness Program Kit
Launch materials for employee health initiatives - kickoff content, weekly challenges, tracking tools, and manager resources.
Pediatric Condition Toolkit
Parent-friendly materials for managing childhood conditions - action plans, school forms, emergency cards, and caregiver guides.
How to create health information with Raccoon AI
Define your project and audience
Share who the materials are for, what you're trying to accomplish, and any constraints.
Know your audience
A handout for elderly patients looks very different from one for new parents or teenagers. Reading level, concerns, and format all vary.
Diabetes educator at Riverside Family Medicine. 200 Type 2 patients, mostly 50-70, newly diagnosed. Current materials from 2010. Need "first 30 days" guide they can reference at home - not scary, covers basics. Audience: adults 50+, 6th grade reading level, some Spanish-speaking, vision issues (large print).
Specify the deliverables
List exactly what materials you need and how they'll be used.
Multi-format thinking
Patients lose handouts, caregivers need different info, and some content works better as a card or magnet than a booklet.
Type 2 "first 30 days" deliverables: main booklet (8-10 pages - blood sugar basics, meds, food, movement, emotional support), wallet blood sugar log, fridge magnet (hypo symptoms, warning signs), appointment prep checklist, family member one-pager, grocery quick reference. Clinic logo and phone (555-234-5678) on everything. Space to write in A1C goal and meds.
Review and refine content
Check the content for accuracy, tone, and appropriateness for your specific patient population.
Clinical review
Have your medical team review before distribution. Local protocols, formulary preferences, and practice patterns vary.
Adjustments: remove "never eat" language (use "enjoy less often" - reduces shame), add daily foot checking section, clarify hypos are medication-specific not universal, add "wins to celebrate" tracker for small victories, add notes section for questions between appointments (MA Sofia's suggestion).
Adapt for different channels
Create versions for print, patient portal, email, and other distribution methods.
Meet patients where they are
Some patients want paper, some want digital. Caregivers often want something they can reference quickly. Plan for multiple formats.
Multi-channel versions: print-ready PDFs (300dpi, CMYK), patient portal booklet (single pages), 5-week email drip series (need compelling subject lines - 30% open rate), 10 text message tips (160 chars each), waiting room slideshow (8-10 slides looping).
Create companion materials
Build supporting resources for staff, caregivers, and special situations.
Complete ecosystem
Patient education works best when everyone's on the same page - clinical staff, front desk, family members.
Supporting resources: MA talking points (how to introduce booklet during rooming), Spanish translation draft (booklet + magnet), caregiver version for adult children (medication management, when to escalate), provider quick reference (which materials at diagnosis vs follow-up vs ongoing), patient feedback form.
Plan for updates
Set up a system for keeping materials current as guidelines change.
Living documents
Medical information evolves. Build in a review cycle and make updates easy.
Maintenance plan: "last reviewed" footer format, 6-month review checklist (ADA guidelines, drug info, contact numbers), patient feedback tracking doc for quarterly updates, change log template for staff. Plus provider meeting announcement - Dr. Chen presenting on why we invested in this update.

Frequently asked questions
Create accessible, accurate health education materials. Here are answers to common questions about health information with Raccoon AI.
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Content is based on established medical knowledge and guidelines. However, always verify health information with authoritative sources and have clinical content reviewed by healthcare professionals.
Yes. Create handouts, guides, and educational content for patients. Specify reading level and include appropriate health literacy considerations.
Create wellness resources, journaling prompts, and educational content about mental health topics. This is not therapy-always recommend professional help for mental health concerns.
Yes. Summarize research findings, explain study results, and synthesize information from multiple sources. Always verify citations and check for recent updates.
Any reading level from 4th grade to professional. Specify your audience and Raccoon AI adjusts vocabulary, sentence complexity, and assumed background knowledge.
Yes. Create health education materials in multiple languages. Ensure culturally appropriate content and have native speakers review translations.