Dermatologist Video

v1.0.0

Create 60-90 second patient-focused dermatology videos highlighting your expertise, treatments, and patient approach to attract and inform new patients.

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MIT-0
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LicenseMIT-0 · Free to use, modify, and redistribute. No attribution required.
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Benign
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Benign
high confidence
Purpose & Capability
The name, description, and SKILL.md all align: the skill's goal is to create short dermatology marketing videos and the instructions focus on gathering practice details and producing a script and b-roll suggestions. There are no unrelated dependencies, binaries, or credentials requested.
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Instruction Scope
Instructions tell the agent to 'gather' patient demographics and recommend before/after treatment comparisons (with consent). That is coherent for marketing videos but involves potentially sensitive patient data/PHI. The guidance is vague about how to obtain, store, de-identify, and document consent for such images and stories.
Install Mechanism
No install spec and no code files (instruction-only). Nothing is written to disk or downloaded by the skill itself — lowest-risk installation posture.
Credentials
The skill requests no environment variables, credentials, or config paths. There are no disproportionate credential requests.
Persistence & Privilege
always is false and the skill does not request persistent presence or permissions to modify other skills. Autonomous invocation is allowed (platform default) but not accompanied by elevated privileges.
Assessment
This skill itself is coherent and contains no hidden installs or credential requests, but it asks you to collect patient demographics and before/after images. Before using it: 1) Do not upload or share identifiable patient information without a signed patient authorization; obtain documented consent for photos/videos and for marketing use. 2) De-identify images (remove faces, names, dates, tattoos, and metadata) unless you have explicit consent. 3) Ensure any third-party editing, storage, or hosting you use is HIPAA-compliant (or complies with your local privacy laws). 4) Have a clinician review and approve scripts for clinical accuracy and avoid unsupported medical claims. 5) Keep a record of consent and releases associated with each patient story. If you cannot guarantee secure handling of PHI or proper consent, restrict the skill to fictitious or fully de-identified examples only.

Like a lobster shell, security has layers — review code before you run it.

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License

MIT-0
Free to use, modify, and redistribute. No attribution required.

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