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:
- CONCISE & ACTIONABLE: Treatment plans default to 3-4 pages maximum, focusing only on clinically essential information that impacts care decisions
- Patient-Centered: Plans must be evidence-based, measurable, and compliant with healthcare regulations (HIPAA, documentation standards)
- 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
Visual Enhancement with Scientific Schematics
⚠️ MANDATORY: Every treatment plan MUST include at least 1 AI-generated figure using the scientific-schematics skill.
This is not optional. Treatment plans benefit greatly from visual elements. Before finalizing any document:
- Generate at minimum ONE schematic or diagram (e.g., treatment pathway flowchart, care coordination diagram, or therapy timeline)
- For complex plans: include decision algorithm flowchart
- For rehabilitation plans: include milestone progression diagram
How to generate figures:
- Use the scientific-schematics skill to generate AI-powered publication-quality diagrams
- Simply describe your desired diagram in natural language
- Nano Banana Pro will automatically generate, review, and refine the schematic
How to generate schematics:
python scripts/generate_schematic.py "your diagram description" -o figures/output.png
The AI will automatically:
- Create publication-quality images with proper formatting
- Review and refine through multiple iterations
- Ensure accessibility (colorblind-friendly, high contrast)
- Save outputs in the figures/ directory
When to add schematics:
- Treatment pathway flowcharts
- Care coordination diagrams
- Therapy progression timelines
- Multidisciplinary team interaction diagrams
- Medication management flowcharts
- Rehabilitation protocol visualizations
- Clinical decision algorithm diagrams
- Any complex concept that benefits from visualization
For detailed guidance on creating schematics, refer to the scientific-schematics skill documentation.
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):
- Header Box: Patient info, diagnosis, date, molecular/risk profile if applicable
- Treatment Regimen: Numbered list of specific interventions
- Supportive Care: Brief bullet points
- Rationale: 1-2 sentence justification (optional for standard protocols)
- Monitoring: Key parameters and frequency
- Evidence Level: Guideline reference or evidence grade (e.g., "Level 1, FDA approved")
- 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):
-
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")
-
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
-
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
- Primary Treatment Goals (using
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
\thi