1. Be clear and specific in your prompts
Avoid: “Tell me amoxicillin dosing”
Suggested: “Give me amoxicillin dose in AOM children”
2. Include details to get better answers
Avoid: “Can I take ibuprofen”
Suggested: “Can I take ibuprofen if I have a stomach ulcer”
3. You can personalize the AI’s answer for a particular
audience
Avoid: “Explain asthma to me”
Suggested: “Explain asthma to a child using toys as an analogy”
4. Do not interrupt the AI while it is answering your
prompt
5. If you want a care plan created, ask for a care plan
The AI knows to include Medical Conditions, Drug Therapy Problem(s),
Goals of Therapy, Alternatives, Recommendations, Monitoring and
Follow-Up, etc.
6. If you don’t get a satisfactory answer, consider rephrasing the
question with more context
7. Do not ask questions about diagnostic criteria for specific
diseases
You may get a satisfactory answer, but the AI is not (yet) tuned for
this. Its domain knowledge is medications.
8. You can ask about a clinical scenario and get a potential
solution
Example: “Patient has hypertension and is now diagnosed with heart
failure, taking ramipril 10 mg daily, and is now coming in with
shortness of breath and their legs are swelling up. What are possible
therapies for them to start?”
9. The AI Medication Expert has memory
You can ask follow-up questions to a previous query, but once you
refresh the page, its memory is reset.
10. You can technically ask multiple questions in one
prompt
Example: “side effect of metformin and side effect of bisoprolol and
side effect of ramipril” will produce a list of side effects for each
drug, but generally stick to one question at a time.