Family Emergency Contact Card

Creates a printable and phone-friendly emergency contact card with key contacts, urgent notes, versions, update checks, and a safe sharing plan.

Audits

Pass

Install

openclaw skills install family-emergency-contact-card

Family Emergency Contact Card

Overview

Use this skill when a household, caregiver, parent, roommate group, traveler, elder-support circle, pet sitter, or house sitter needs emergency contact information in one clear place. The skill produces a printable and phone-friendly contact card plus guidance for what belongs on a quick card versus a more private full version.

The goal is fast contact routing and handoff clarity. It is not a full medical record, legal file, custody document, or password vault.

When to Use

Use this skill when the user asks to:

  • make a family emergency contact card
  • create a fridge, wallet, phone, or caregiver emergency card
  • organize emergency contacts for a child, elder, pet, roommate, traveler, or house sitter
  • prepare a safe handoff note for babysitters, caregivers, schools, neighbors, or relatives
  • decide what emergency information to print, store, and share
  • update scattered emergency contacts before travel, school, caregiving, or a move

Trigger keywords: family emergency contact card, emergency contact card template, caregiver contact card, fridge emergency list, wallet emergency card, house sitter emergency contacts, school emergency contacts

Required Inputs

Ask for only what is needed:

  • Who the card covers: individual, child, elder, pet, household, travel group, or temporary caregiver handoff
  • Primary contacts and backup contacts
  • Relevant local contacts such as neighbor, school, workplace, care facility, doctor or clinic, pharmacy, insurance contact, veterinarian, property manager, or building security
  • Urgent notes that helpers need to know, such as allergies, medications to mention, mobility needs, communication needs, pickup limitations, language needs, or pet needs
  • Which version the user wants: wallet, fridge, phone, caregiver handoff, travel copy, pet sitter copy, or full private version
  • Any sharing limits or people who should not receive the card

Do not ask for full medical records, ID numbers, insurance policy numbers, passwords, door codes, alarm codes, confidential custody documents, or sensitive legal documents.

Workflow

  1. Define coverage. Identify whose emergency information is being prepared and the situations where the card may be used.
  2. Collect contact categories. Gather primary contacts, backup contacts, local helper, school or work contact, care facility, doctor or clinic, pharmacy, insurance contact, pet or vet contact, and property contact if relevant.
  3. Capture urgent notes. Add only the brief notes a helper may need immediately, such as allergies, medications to mention, mobility needs, communication needs, pickup restrictions, language needs, or pet care alerts.
  4. Separate public and private details. Decide what belongs on a quick card, what belongs in a private full version, and what should not be included at all.
  5. Build the card versions. Create a wallet or phone version, a fridge version, and a caregiver or house-sitter handoff version if needed.
  6. Add verification checks. Prompt the user to confirm phone numbers, spellings, permissions, pickup authorization, address details, and whether old copies should be replaced.
  7. Create an update cadence. Add quarterly review prompts and event-based updates for moves, new schools, new doctors, travel, caregiver changes, new pets, or household changes.
  8. Prepare safe sharing guidance. Recommend who gets which version and how to avoid oversharing sensitive information.
  9. Output the final card. Provide a clean copy the user can print, screenshot, paste into notes, or adapt for a caregiver handoff.

Output Format

Produce a practical emergency contact packet with these sections:

  1. Card Scope
    • Person, pet, household, or group covered
    • Intended use case
    • Version: quick card, private full card, caregiver handoff, travel copy, or pet sitter copy
  2. Quick Emergency Contact Card
    • Name or household label
    • Primary emergency contact
    • Backup emergency contact
    • Local helper or neighbor
    • School, work, care facility, or property contact if relevant
    • Doctor, clinic, pharmacy, or vet contact if relevant
    • Brief urgent notes
  3. Private Full Version Additions
    • Extra contacts
    • More detailed care notes
    • Insurance contact only if the user chooses to include it
    • Location notes that are safe to share with trusted helpers
  4. Caregiver or House-Sitter Handoff Notes
    • Who to call first
    • What to mention
    • Pickup or access reminders
    • Pet or household notes if relevant
  5. Verification Checklist
    • Numbers tested
    • Names updated
    • Permissions confirmed
    • Old copies replaced
    • Sensitive details reviewed
  6. Safe Sharing Plan
    • Who receives the quick version
    • Who receives the private version
    • Where copies will be stored
    • Next review date

Quality Bar

A strong result:

  • is short enough to use under stress
  • clearly separates immediate contacts from optional private details
  • avoids asking the user to expose unnecessary sensitive data
  • gives different versions for different audiences when needed
  • includes verification and update reminders
  • produces text the user can print or save immediately

Safety Boundary

This skill is not emergency dispatch, medical advice, legal advice, custody advice, or security advice. If there is immediate danger, the user should contact local emergency services. Do not request or store passwords, door codes, alarm codes, identity numbers, full medical records, insurance policy numbers, custody documents, or confidential legal records in chat. Encourage the user to share sensitive versions only with trusted people and to store printed copies carefully.