Clinical Case Report
Generate structured medical case presentations in SOAP or narrative format for clinical documentation.
Installation
- Make sure Claude is on your device and in your terminal.
Skills load from
~/.claude/skills/when Claude Code starts up — so you need it on your machine first. If you don't have it yet, install it once with the command below, then runclaudein any terminal to verify.One-time setupnpm i -g @anthropic-ai/claude-codeAlready have it? Skip ahead.
- Paste into Claude Code or into your terminal.
This copies the whole skill folder into
~/.claude/skills/clinical-case-report-nexu-io/— the SKILL.md plus any scripts, reference docs, or templates the skill ships with. Safe default: works for every skill.Faster alternative (instruction-only skills)
Skips the clone and grabs only the SKILL.md file. Don't use this if the skill ships Python scripts, reference markdowns, or asset templates — they won't be downloaded and the skill will fail when it tries to load them.
Quick install (SKILL.md only)Sign up to copy - Restart Claude Code.
Quit and reopen Claude Code (or any other agent that loads from
~/.claude/skills/). New skills are picked up on startup. - Just ask Claude.
Skills auto-activate when your request matches the skill's description — no slash command needed. Trigger phrases live in the skill's own frontmatter; you can read them in the “What this skill does” section above.
Prefer to read the source first? Open on GitHub.
When Claude uses it
Structured medical case presentation for clinical rounds, conferences, and documentation. Generates SOAP-format or narrative case reports with physiologically accurate vitals, labs, and evidence-based plans. Use when the brief mentions "case report", "case presentation", "SOAP note", "clinical case", "ward rounds", "case summary", or "patient presentation".
What this skill does
Clinical Case Report Skill
Generate a structured medical case presentation for clinical rounds, conferences, or documentation. The output follows standard medical formatting conventions used in hospital settings worldwide.
What you will produce
A single-page HTML case report (index.html). Content varies by format
(see references/case-formats.md — selected in Step 0):
SOAP / Conference format:
- Patient identification — age, sex, chief complaint
- History of Present Illness (HPI) — chronological narrative with pertinent positives and negatives
- Past Medical History, Medications, Allergies
- Review of Systems
- Physical Examination — systematic findings by system
- Vital Signs — formatted table with reference ranges and flags
- Investigations — laboratory results and imaging findings
- Assessment — primary diagnosis and differential (3–5 items) with clinical reasoning for each
- Management Plan — evidence-based, organised by problem
Brief Rounds format (daily review, ward round, handover, ICU, post-call):
- ID line — age, sex, day of admission, primary problem
- Interval events / current status — what has changed since last review
- Active problems — numbered list
- Plan-by-problem — concise actions for each active problem
- Full HPI and systematic physical examination are not included
Step-by-step workflow
Step 0 — Load reference files
Before starting, read both reference files:
references/case-formats.md— use this to choose the correct output format (SOAP, Conference, or Brief Rounds) based on the user's contextreferences/checklist.md— keep P0 gates in mind throughout; you must pass all P0 items before emitting the final artifact
Step 1 — Parse the brief
Read the user's prompt and extract:
- Patient age and sex
- Chief complaint or presenting problem
- Any vitals, labs, or imaging the user has provided
- Clinical context: ED, ward rounds, conference case, outpatient, etc.
- Specialty context: cardiology, emergency, internal medicine, etc.
If the chief complaint or presenting problem is missing:
- SOAP / Conference: ask one clarifying question before proceeding. Do not proceed without it.
- Brief Rounds: if the admission problem or ID line is already available (e.g. "day-3 ICU review for septic shock"), proceed directly — a separate chief complaint is not required.
Step 2 — Build the clinical narrative
For SOAP / Conference outputs: write the HPI as a continuous prose narrative in standard clinical style:
"This is a [age]-year-old [sex] with a history of [relevant PMH] who presents with [chief complaint]. Symptoms began [timeline] and are characterised by [quality, severity, radiation]. Associated symptoms include [list]. Pertinent negatives include [list]."
The HPI must be chronological. Include timeline markers ("2 hours prior to presentation", "onset yesterday morning").
For Brief Rounds outputs (daily review, ward round, handover, ICU, post-call): skip the full HPI and examination. Instead produce:
- ID line: "[Age][sex], Day [N] of admission, [primary problem]"
- Interval events / current status: what has changed since last review
- Active problems: numbered list
- Plan-by-problem: concise action for each active problem
Step 3 — Generate physiologically consistent clinical data
If the user has not provided specific values, generate values that are internally consistent with the diagnosis:
Consistency checks (typical patterns):
- A patient in shock typically has: HR >100, SBP <90, raised lactate, impaired capillary refill — but medications (beta-blockers), age, or shock type (neurogenic, spinal) can alter this pattern
- Pneumonia typically presents with raised WBC, raised CRP, temperature >38°C — but afebrile pneumonia exists, especially in the elderly or immunocompromised
- A STEMI typically shows ST elevation in contiguous leads and raised high-sensitivity troponin — but early presentations may have initially normal troponin; CK-MB is not universally required
- Sepsis typically shows raised or low WBC, raised lactate >2, temperature abnormality — but compensated early sepsis may present with normal vitals
- Lab units must match convention: creatinine in µmol/L or mg/dL (state which), glucose in mmol/L, haemoglobin in g/dL
Critical rule — preserve user-provided data:
- Never overwrite a value the user has explicitly stated
- If a user-provided value is atypical for the diagnosis, keep it and note the atypical presentation in the assessment rather than forcing canonical numbers
- Never generate a value that contradicts the stated diagnosis
Step 4 — Write the assessment
The assessment section must contain:
- Primary diagnosis stated clearly on the first line
- Clinical reasoning — one sentence explaining why this is the most likely diagnosis
- Differential diagnosis — exactly 3 to 5 items, each with one sentence of supporting or refuting evidence
- Risk stratification — include a validated clinical score where applicable (TIMI for ACS, GRACE for ACS, Killip class + Shock Index for STEMI/cardiogenic shock, CURB-65 for pneumonia, qSOFA for sepsis, Wells for PE, etc.). Killip class and Shock Index together are accepted as sufficient risk stratification for STEMI/cardiogenic shock cases.
Step 5 — Write the management plan
The plan must be:
- Specific: write drug names, doses, routes, and frequencies. Do not write "start antibiotics" — write "Piperacillin-Tazobactam 4.5g IV q8h for 5 days"
- Organised by problem using numbered headers
- Evidence-based: management must reflect current standard of care for the diagnosis
- Complete: include investigations to order, monitoring parameters, consults to request, and disposition
If you are uncertain about a specific dose, write "[drug name] — dose per local formulary/protocol" rather than inventing a dose.
Important — Prescribing Safety
Generated plans must:
- Be marked as educational/simulated, not a substitute for clinician judgment
- Use "per local formulary/protocol" language when required patient variables (weight, renal function, allergies) are missing from the brief
- List key contraindications and unknowns before medication recommendations when relevant patient data has not been provided
- Never claim a plan is "definitive" or "standard of care" without full patient context (allergy status, renal/hepatic function, pregnancy status, weight, anticoagulation/bleeding risk)
- Include a disclaimer footer in the HTML output stating the case is for educational and documentation purposes only
Step 6 — Write index.html
Requirements for the HTML output:
- Professional medical document typography (Georgia or system serif font preferred)
- White background, dark text — suitable for printing
- Vital signs and lab results in HTML
<table>elements - Critical findings (ST elevation, raised troponin, low BP, etc.) highlighted in a visually distinct callout box with red left border
- @media print CSS rules so the document prints cleanly on A4/Letter
- Tag every major section with
data-od-idfor comment-mode targeting:
<section data-od-id="hpi">...</section>
<section data-od-id="vitals">...</section>
<section data-od-id="pmh">...</section>
<section data-od-id="examination">...</section>
<section data-od-id="investigations">...</section>
<section data-od-id="assessment">...</section>
<section data-od-id="plan">...</section>
Step 7 — Self-check against references/checklist.md
Before emitting <artifact>, run every P0 item in references/checklist.md.
All P0 items must pass. Fix any failures before emitting.
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