Home First Aid Kit Audit Card

Use when a user wants to audit a home, car, dorm, travel, or workplace first aid kit for supply readiness, expired items, missing categories, storage labels, and restock actions. Produces a printable audit card and replenishment list while avoiding medical treatment advice, medication dosing, or diagnosis.

Audits

Pass

Install

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Home First Aid Kit Audit Card

Purpose

Create a practical audit card that helps the user inspect a first aid kit, identify missing or expired supplies, and make the kit easier to find and restock. Keep the work about readiness, storage, labels, and replacement planning.

Boundaries

  • This is not medical advice and must not diagnose, triage, or tell the user how to treat an injury.
  • Do not provide medication dosing, medication selection advice, or instructions for using medicines.
  • If the user mentions a serious injury, severe bleeding, trouble breathing, suspected poisoning, loss of consciousness, head/neck/spine injury, major burn, chest pain, stroke symptoms, anaphylaxis, or any situation that feels dangerous, tell them to contact local emergency services or urgent medical help immediately.
  • For household-specific medical needs, tell the user to follow guidance from qualified clinicians, product labels, and local emergency preparedness authorities.
  • If asked to include medications, limit the output to a neutral tracking row for item name, owner, expiration date, storage note, and who to ask before replacing it. Do not advise whether, when, or how to use it.

Inputs To Request

Ask only for details that improve the audit card:

  • Kit location and use case: home, car, travel, dorm, workshop, office, sports bag, or other.
  • Household context that affects supplies: adults, children, older adults, pets, allergies, known clinician-directed emergency items, outdoor work, tools, kitchen, or travel.
  • Current item list or a photo/text dump if available.
  • Climate and storage concerns: heat, humidity, freezing, car trunk, bathroom cabinet, garage, or shared building.
  • Restock preferences: local store, online order, budget cap, compact kit, or printable checklist only.

If the user lacks an inventory, guide them to empty the kit onto a clean surface and group items by category.

Workflow

  1. Define the kit mission.

    • Name where the kit lives, who may use it, and what situations it is meant to support.
    • Separate home kit, travel kit, car kit, and workplace kit needs when relevant.
  2. Sort the contents into readiness categories.

    • Wound covering: adhesive bandages, sterile gauze, dressings, tape.
    • Cleaning and barrier items: antiseptic wipes, gloves, hand sanitizer, CPR face shield if present.
    • Tools: scissors, tweezers, thermometer, instant cold pack, flashlight, notepad, marker.
    • Wraps and support supplies: elastic bandage, triangular bandage, finger splint, safety pins.
    • Personal or clinician-directed items: track only presence, owner, expiration, and replacement source.
    • Documents: emergency contacts, allergy list, kit inventory, local emergency numbers.
  3. Check readiness.

    • Mark each item as ready, low, missing, expired, damaged, opened, unclear, or not appropriate for this kit.
    • Flag items with damaged packaging, unreadable labels, moisture exposure, heat damage, or missing instructions.
    • Record expiration dates without recommending medical use.
  4. Build the restock card.

    • List missing and expired items by priority: replace now, restock soon, optional upgrade, ask a professional.
    • Convert vague gaps into shopping quantities only when the user supplied a preferred kit size or existing checklist.
    • Keep medicine-related rows as "confirm with clinician/pharmacist or product label" rather than advice.
  5. Make the visible kit label.

    • Include kit location, last audit date, next audit date, emergency number reminder, owner, and restock contact.
    • Add a short "return borrowed items here" line for shared households.
  6. Close with a maintenance rhythm.

    • Suggest a recurring audit after expiration-heavy seasons, trips, moves, car storage changes, or every 6 to 12 months.
    • Recommend checking official preparedness resources or local emergency guidance for baseline kit lists.

Output Format

Use this structure by default:

# First Aid Kit Audit Card

## Kit Snapshot
- Kit location:
- Kit mission:
- People or context considered:
- Audit date:
- Next check:

## Quick Status
- Ready now:
- Replace now:
- Restock soon:
- Unclear or ask a professional:

## Item Audit
| Category | Item | Status | Expiration or condition | Action |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wound covering |  |  |  |  |
| Cleaning and barrier |  |  |  |  |
| Tools |  |  |  |  |
| Wraps and support |  |  |  |  |
| Personal/clinician-directed |  |  |  | Confirm with clinician, pharmacist, product label, or household plan. |
| Documents |  |  |  |  |

## Restock List
| Priority | Item | Why | Replacement note |
|---|---|---|---|
| Replace now |  |  |  |
| Restock soon |  |  |  |
| Optional upgrade |  |  |  |
| Ask a professional |  |  |  |

## Visible Kit Label
- Kit lives at:
- Emergency reminder: call local emergency services for serious or dangerous injuries.
- Last checked:
- Next check:
- Restock owner:

## Safety Boundary
This audit covers supply readiness only. It does not provide medical treatment instructions, diagnosis, or medication dosing. For serious injuries or dangerous symptoms, seek emergency care immediately.

Quality Checks

Before finishing, verify that the output:

  • Produces a concrete audit card, restock list, and kit label.
  • Separates missing, expired, damaged, low, and unclear items.
  • Keeps medications to tracking only and contains no dosing or treatment instructions.
  • Escalates serious injuries to emergency care.
  • Uses plain language suitable for printing or sharing with a household.

Example Prompts

Copy and paste one of these to get started:

  • "Audit my home first aid kit. I have bandages, antiseptic wipes, expired pain relief, and scattered supplies in a bathroom drawer."
  • "Check my car first aid kit for summer readiness — it's been baking in the trunk for a year."
  • "We're restocking the office first aid cabinet. Make an audit card and restock list from scratch."