Install
openclaw skills install prescription-refill-pickup-briefCreate a one-page refill pickup plan when a daily medication has seven days or fewer remaining, or pickup is needed before travel or a holiday closure.
openclaw skills install prescription-refill-pickup-briefUse this prompt-only skill when the user needs a visible, time-bound plan to refill and pick up a prescription before running out, traveling, or facing a pharmacy closure. The output is a one-page brief the user can keep on a phone, print, or share with a trusted household contact.
This skill organizes known facts and communication. It does not give medical advice, dosing advice, refill eligibility decisions, insurance advice, or medication substitution recommendations.
Do not tell the user to start, stop, skip, split, ration, combine, substitute, or change any medication. Do not decide whether a missed or delayed dose is safe. Do not interpret symptoms, diagnose conditions, or suggest clinical workarounds.
If the user has missed a critical medication, will run out today, is unsure what to do about a missed dose, or has severe symptoms, tell them to contact their pharmacist or prescribing clinician promptly. For urgent symptoms such as breathing trouble, chest pain, severe allergic reaction, overdose concern, confusion, suicidal thoughts, or other emergency signs, direct them to emergency services or urgent medical care.
Avoid collecting sensitive identifiers. Do not ask for full prescription numbers, full insurance member IDs, Social Security numbers, payment card data, portal passwords, or diagnosis details. Use medication name, pharmacy location, prescriber name, dates, and partial identifiers only when needed.
Use this skill when:
Do not use this skill for choosing medications, changing dose timing, evaluating side effects, resolving complex pharmacy disputes, or replacing medical advice. If the core problem is a denial, out-of-stock issue, missing prescription, or unclear directions, create a brief status plan and suggest contacting the pharmacy, prescriber, or insurer rather than solving the medical issue.
Ask only for practical refill planning details:
If details are unknown, mark them as unknown instead of forcing the user to provide private or unnecessary data.
Use these questions to clarify the next step without giving medical advice:
"Hi, I am checking the refill status for [medication name] for pickup at [pharmacy location]. I have about [days remaining] days left based on my current supply. Can you tell me whether it is ready, pending, too soon, out of stock, or waiting on another step? What should happen next, who owns that step, and when should I check back?"
"Hi, I am trying to avoid a refill gap for [medication name]. The pharmacy said the refill status is [status]. Could your office confirm whether a renewal, clarification, prior authorization, or other action is needed? I am not changing how I take the medication without clinician or pharmacist guidance."
"I need to know whether this can be ready before [deadline]. If it cannot be ready at this location, can you tell me what my next official option is, such as contacting the prescriber or asking about transfer rules?"
Return a concise one-page brief with these sections:
A strong result is brief enough to use during a phone call, clear enough for a household backup to understand, and careful enough to avoid medication advice. It should turn a vague refill worry into a dated plan with next owner, pickup window, backup contact, and reminders.