Emergency Ready Family

Prepare your household with emergency plans, disaster readiness, first-aid basics, and survival kit checklists. For educational reference only.

Audits

Pass

Install

openclaw skills install emergency-ready-family

Emergency Ready Family

Overview

Emergency Ready Family helps households build awareness, plans, and kits for common emergencies. It covers family communication protocols, disaster-specific guidance, first-aid fundamentals, and survival kit checklists—empowering users to be prepared, not panicked.

Important: This skill provides educational reference only. It is not a substitute for professional emergency training, medical advice, or official government guidance. Users should consult local authorities and certified professionals for critical decisions.

When to Use

Use this skill when the user asks to:

  • Create a family emergency plan
  • Build a go-bag or survival kit
  • Learn disaster-specific protocols
  • Review first-aid basics
  • Conduct a household safety audit

Trigger keywords: emergency plan, disaster preparedness, survival kit, family emergency, first aid basics, evacuation plan, emergency checklist, prepare for disaster

Workflow

Step 1 — Household Profile & Risk Assessment

Collect from the user:

  • Household size and members (adults, children, elderly, pets)
  • Geographic region and common risks (earthquake, flood, hurricane, wildfire, winter storm, etc.)
  • Housing type (apartment, house, multi-story)
  • Mobility or medical considerations
  • Local emergency alert systems they can access

Step 2 — Communication Plan

Design a family communication protocol:

  • Out-of-area contact: One central person everyone checks in with
  • Meeting points: Indoor, neighborhood, and out-of-neighborhood locations
  • Communication methods: Phone tree, group chat, walkie-talkies if cell fails
  • ICE (In Case of Emergency) info: Stored in wallets and phones
  • School/work protocols: How to reach or collect children and adults

Step 3 — Disaster-Specific Protocols

Provide tailored guidance for their top 2–3 regional risks:

  • Before: Preparation steps unique to the disaster type
  • During: Immediate actions (shelter-in-place vs. evacuate)
  • After: Safety checks, when to return, utility precautions

Keep guidance general and educational. Direct users to official sources for real-time alerts.

Step 4 — First-Aid Basics

Cover high-level first-aid awareness (not certification-level training):

  • Kit essentials: Bandages, gauze, antiseptic, thermometer, gloves, scissors
  • Common situations: Cuts, burns, sprains, fever, choking (adult and child)
  • When to seek professional help: Red flags that require calling emergency services
  • CPR/AED awareness: Encourage formal certification; do not teach step-by-step CPR

Step 5 — Survival Kit & Go-Bag

Build tiered checklists:

  • Home kit: 3-day supply of water, food, flashlight, radio, batteries, medications, documents
  • Go-bag (per person): Water, snacks, first-aid mini kit, flashlight, whistle, cash, copies of ID, medications, seasonal clothing, comfort item for children
  • Pet kit: Food, water, carrier, leash, medical records
  • Vehicle kit: Jumper cables, blanket, water, snacks, flashlight, basic tools

Include quantities based on household size and maintenance reminders (check expiration dates every 6 months).

Step 6 — Practice & Maintenance Schedule

Suggest a realistic rhythm:

  • Quarterly: Check kit supplies, update medications, review meeting points
  • Annually: Full drill (evacuation route, communication test)
  • After major changes: New baby, move, new medical condition, new pet

Templates

Apartment Dweller

Focus on vertical evacuation, limited storage, and building protocols.

Single-Family Home

Focus on utility shut-offs, yard hazards, and multi-zone meeting points.

Multi-Generational Household

Focus on mobility aids, medication management, and caregiver roles.

Pet-Heavy Household

Focus on pet carriers, veterinary records, and pet-friendly shelters.

Output Format

The output includes:

  1. Risk Profile — Top regional risks and household-specific factors
  2. Communication Plan — Contact tree, meeting points, and ICE info
  3. Disaster Protocols — Before/during/after for top 2–3 risks
  4. First-Aid Awareness — Kit list, common situations, red flags
  5. Kit Checklists — Home kit, go-bag, pet kit, vehicle kit
  6. Practice Schedule — Quarterly and annual maintenance routine

Safety & Compliance

  • Not medical advice: First-aid content is awareness-level only; always encourage professional training
  • Not official guidance: Direct users to local emergency management agencies for authoritative instructions
  • No detailed instructions for dangerous procedures (e.g., emergency surgery, improvised rescue)
  • No guaranteed survival claims
  • This is a descriptive prompt-flow skill with zero code execution, zero network calls, and zero credential requirements

Acceptance Criteria

  1. User provides household details; output is a tailored preparedness plan
  2. Communication plan includes multiple meeting points and an out-of-area contact
  3. Disaster protocols match the user's geographic risks
  4. First-aid section stays at awareness level and encourages professional training
  5. Kit checklists are complete and include maintenance reminders
  6. No medical advice or dangerous procedural instructions

Examples

Example 1: Earthquake-Prone Region

User says: "I live in California with my spouse and two kids. How do I prepare for earthquakes?"

Skill guides: Collect housing type and ages. Produce an earthquake-focused plan with communication protocol, drop-cover-hold awareness, kit checklists, and quarterly maintenance schedule.

Example 2: Winter Storm Region

User says: "We get bad winters. I want to make sure my elderly parents and I are ready."

Skill guides: Collect household composition and medical considerations. Produce a winter-storm plan with shelter-in-place guidance, medication stockpile advice, and multi-generational communication tree.