Caregiver Shift Handoff Card

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Create a practical handoff card for temporary caregivers, babysitters, elder care helpers, or family coverage with routines, preferences, supplies, contacts, escalation cues, and end-of-shift notes.

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Caregiver Shift Handoff Card

Overview

Caregiver Shift Handoff Card helps a user prepare a concise, usable handoff for someone covering care for a child, older adult, disabled family member, recovering patient, pet, or household-dependent person. It turns scattered routine details into a shift-ready card with schedule, preferences, access notes, supplies, contacts, normal patterns, concerning signals, and end-of-shift notes.

This skill is document-only and informational. It does not diagnose, treat, prescribe, give medication dosing instructions, replace professional care plans, or override guardian, care recipient, clinician, school, facility, or emergency instructions.

When to Use

Use this skill when the user needs to brief someone who is temporarily providing care, including:

  • Babysitting or after-school coverage
  • Elder care coverage by relatives, neighbors, aides, or respite helpers
  • Short-term help during illness, recovery, travel, work, or appointments
  • Pet or household-dependent care when routine details matter
  • A printable or message-friendly handoff before a care shift

Trigger phrases: "make a caregiver handoff", "babysitter instructions", "elder care shift notes", "care routine for someone covering today", "handoff checklist for my parent", "what should I tell the sitter"

Required Inputs

Ask for the minimum context needed to make the card useful:

  • Who is receiving care and their preferred name
  • Care window, date, location, and who is covering
  • Routine schedule and priority needs
  • Food, hydration, mobility, toileting, sleep, comfort, or activity preferences
  • Supplies, access details, equipment, and where important items are located
  • Emergency contacts, guardian contacts, clinician contacts, and backup people
  • Normal patterns versus signs that should prompt a call or emergency action
  • Existing written instructions from a guardian, clinician, school, facility, or care plan

If the user does not have written medical or care-plan instructions, mark those fields as "not provided" and recommend using the official written instructions when available.

Safety Boundaries

  • Do not provide medication dosing instructions, dose timing, dose changes, substitutions, or administration advice.
  • If medication, treatment, feeding tube, oxygen, wound care, seizure plan, allergy plan, or other clinical care is involved, tell the user to copy from guardian-written or clinician-written instructions and verify with the responsible adult or clinician.
  • Do not invent allergies, diagnoses, restrictions, red flags, emergency procedures, access codes, custody permissions, or legal authority.
  • For urgent symptoms, injury, danger, missing person concerns, abuse, or inability to provide safe care, direct the user to local emergency services or the designated responsible adult.
  • Respect privacy. Include only what the temporary caregiver needs for the shift.

Workflow

Step 1 - Define the Shift

Capture care recipient, caregiver, date, start and end times, location, primary contact, backup contact, and whether the handoff is for in-home, school pickup, overnight, appointment, or respite coverage.

Step 2 - Build the Routine Timeline

Create a simple timeline for the shift. Include meals, snacks, rest, activities, transportation, check-ins, bedtime, pet care, or household support as relevant. Keep tasks specific enough for someone else to follow.

Step 3 - List Preferences and Communication Notes

Document what helps the care recipient feel comfortable: names, communication style, calming strategies, favorite activities, dislikes, mobility preferences, sensory notes, privacy needs, independence preferences, and consent-related boundaries.

Step 4 - Map Supplies and Access

List where to find essential items, keys, entry instructions, clothes, hygiene supplies, chargers, mobility aids, comfort items, school items, pet supplies, meal items, and cleanup materials. Avoid sharing sensitive access details unless the user confirms they are appropriate for the caregiver.

Step 5 - Separate Normal Patterns From Concerning Signals

Create two lists:

  • Normal for this person: expected behaviors, energy level, appetite, mood, sleep pattern, communication style, or symptoms already known to the caregiver.
  • Call or escalate if: changes, missed pickup, safety concerns, injury, distress, unusual behavior, concerning symptoms, supply shortages, equipment issues, or anything the responsible adult specifically wants escalated.

Use the user's own provided criteria. Do not invent medical thresholds.

Step 6 - Add Contacts and Escalation Order

List who to contact first, second, and in emergencies. Include the reason to contact each person. Keep emergency instructions consistent with local emergency services and official written plans.

Step 7 - Prepare End-of-Shift Notes

Include a short notes area for what happened, meals or fluids offered, activities completed, mood, sleep or rest, issues, supplies running low, questions for the next caregiver, and follow-up needed.

Output Format

Produce a compact handoff card with these sections:

  • Shift Snapshot
  • Care Recipient Basics
  • Today's Timeline
  • Preferences and Comfort Notes
  • Meals, Snacks, and Hydration
  • Supplies, Access, and Equipment
  • Normal for This Person
  • Call or Escalate If
  • Contacts and Escalation Order
  • Existing Written Instructions to Follow
  • End-of-Shift Notes

Use bullets or a simple table depending on the channel. Keep the card short enough to print or send as one message unless the user asks for a detailed version.

Quality Bar

A strong handoff lets a temporary caregiver safely understand the day, locate what they need, know what is normal, know when to call, and leave clear notes for the next person without relying on memory or improvised medical guidance.

Example Prompts

Copy and paste one of these to get started:

  • "My neighbor is watching my mom for the afternoon while I'm at an appointment. Make a caregiver handoff card with her routine, meals, preferences, contacts, and what to watch for."
  • "I need babysitter instructions for tonight — dinner, bedtime routine, screen rules, allergy notes, emergency contacts. Create a one-page handoff."
  • "My sister is covering elder care for the weekend. Help me build a shift handoff card she can follow with the schedule, supplies, and escalation cues."