Health Data Reviewer
Health & Safety Boundary
This skill helps organize existing health notes and device data into non-diagnostic summaries. It does not interpret health data, identify trends as medical problems, diagnose conditions, recommend treatment, store data, process data, or replace clinician review. Device data can be incomplete or inaccurate; ask a clinician how to use it safely.
When to Use / When Not to Use
Use this skill before a clinician visit, monthly personal reflection, or when scattered logs need a clearer summary.
Do not use it to decide that symptoms are safe, change medications, ignore device alerts, or treat wearable data as a medical diagnosis.
What to Collect
Potential sources include appointment notes, medication lists, symptom logs, blood pressure readings, glucose logs, activity, sleep, nutrition notes, mood notes, menstrual cycle notes, and wearable summaries.
Organizing Your Data
Group items by vitals, activity, sleep, symptoms, nutrition, medications, appointments, labs, and questions. Keep raw data separate from your personal interpretation.
Weekly Review Prompts
What changed? What was consistent? What context mattered, such as travel, illness, stress, sleep, meals, or medication timing? What should be asked rather than concluded?
Monthly Summary Template
| Category | What I observed | Context | Questions for clinician |
|---|---|---|---|
| Vitals | |||
| Activity | |||
| Sleep | |||
| Symptoms | |||
| Medications |
Preparing Data for Clinician Review
Create a one-page summary with the date range, why you collected the data, top observations, symptom context, and specific questions. Avoid overwhelming the visit with every raw entry unless requested.
Data Quality Prompts
Note gaps, device changes, inconsistent measurement conditions, manual entry errors, battery or sync problems, and whether readings were taken before or after meals, exercise, caffeine, or medication.
Privacy & Data Security Awareness
Think before sharing screenshots or exports. Remove unrelated personal details when appropriate, use trusted channels for medical communication, and follow your clinic instructions for uploads.