Pregnancy Tracker

v1.0.0

Track pregnancy journey with weekly updates, symptom logging, and milestone countdowns

1· 1.8k·2 current·2 all-time
Security Scan
VirusTotalVirusTotal
Benign
View report →
OpenClawOpenClaw
Suspicious
medium confidence
!
Purpose & Capability
The skill promises week-by-week tracking, cross-device sync, reminders, and appointment management, but the package is instruction-only with no code, no storage mechanism, no cloud integration, and no required credentials. Claims like "sync across devices" and "All data stays local" are contradictory or unsupported by any implementation details.
!
Instruction Scope
SKILL.md describes what the agent should do (log symptoms, send reminders, share summaries) but gives no concrete runtime instructions, file paths, or APIs. That vagueness grants the agent broad discretion about where/how to store or transmit sensitive health data — the instructions neither specify local-only storage mechanics nor explicitly forbid network transmission.
Install Mechanism
There is no install spec and no code files. This minimizes direct supply-chain risk because nothing will be downloaded or written during install. However, it also means promised features would need to be implemented by the agent or host environment.
Credentials
The skill requests no environment variables, credentials, or config paths — which is proportionate. But because it handles sensitive personal health data, the absence of declared storage or sharing mechanisms is notable: you should confirm how and where the data will actually be stored, backed up, or shared.
Persistence & Privilege
always is false (good). The skill is user-invocable and can be invoked autonomously by the agent (platform default). That autonomy combined with the skill's vague storage/sharing semantics could allow the agent to persist or transmit data unless platform policies or the user explicitly constrain it.
What to consider before installing
This skill reads like a feature spec, not an implemented component. Before installing or using it, ask the developer or publisher: (1) Where exactly is journal data stored? (full path, file format, and whether it is encrypted at rest). (2) What mechanism provides "sync across devices" and "reminders" (local OS notifications, cloud service, third‑party API)? If a cloud service is used, which one and what credentials are required? (3) How does sharing (partner summaries) work and can you opt out? (4) Request an implementation or install spec (code or clear platform integration) and a privacy/security statement. If you need guaranteed local-only behavior, do not use the skill until it documents local storage and proves it does not transmit data off your device. Treat any handling of health data as sensitive.

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

latestvk974kpy5td9b7nct9xd79cwjt97zx6d8
1.8kdownloads
1stars
1versions
Updated 1mo ago
v1.0.0
MIT-0

Pregnancy Tracker

Your personal companion for navigating pregnancy—from that first positive test to meeting baby.

What it does

Pregnancy Tracker turns your [[clawd.bot]] into a supportive pregnancy journal. Track weekly development milestones, log how you're feeling, monitor appointments, and count down to your due date. Everything syncs across devices and stays organized in one place.

  • Week-by-week updates - Current development stage, fetal size comparisons, what to expect
  • Symptom logging - Record how you're feeling, energy levels, physical changes
  • Development milestones - Track baby's growth and key developmental moments
  • Due date countdown - Always know how many weeks, days until delivery
  • Appointment reminders - Log OB appointments and get gentle nudges

Usage

Set due date

Tell Clawd your expected due date to personalize all tracking. Updates will shift to match your pregnancy timeline.

Weekly update

Ask for this week's development info. Clawd pulls your current week and shares what's happening with baby, size comparisons, and what you might be experiencing.

Log symptoms

Record physical sensations, mood, energy, cravings, or concerns. Build a personal health diary that helps you notice patterns and share with your healthcare provider.

Manage appointments

Add OB appointments, ultrasounds, and lab visits. Clawd reminds you when they're coming up and helps you track results and next steps.

Countdown to due date

Get a quick status check: how many weeks remain, what trimester you're in, and approximate development stage.

Trimester Overview

First Trimester (Weeks 1–12)

Your body undergoes major changes as pregnancy hormones rise. You may feel tired, experience nausea, and notice breast tenderness. Baby develops major organs and the heart starts beating. Many choose to keep pregnancy private during this period.

Second Trimester (Weeks 13–27)

Often called the "golden trimester." Energy returns, morning sickness typically eases, and you may feel baby's first movements (quickening). Baby's features become more defined and hearing develops. This is a common time for anatomy scans and gender reveals if you choose.

Third Trimester (Weeks 28–40)

Baby grows rapidly and drops lower in the pelvis preparing for birth. You may experience back pain, frequent bathroom trips, and difficulty sleeping. Practice breathing techniques and prepare your birth plan. Baby's brain and lungs mature in final weeks.

Tips

  • Sync across devices - Ask Clawd pregnancy questions from your phone, tablet, or computer. Your data follows you everywhere.
  • Share with your partner - Send weekly summaries to your partner so they stay connected to your journey and baby's development.
  • Capture the details - Log symptoms, cravings, and emotions in the moment. These become precious memories and help your healthcare provider.
  • Prepare for appointments - Write down questions and observations between visits. Clawd helps you organize them so nothing gets missed.
  • All data stays local on your machine - Your pregnancy journey is private and never leaves your device. Clawd respects your privacy by default.

This skill is informational and supportive—not medical advice. Always consult your healthcare provider for medical concerns, medication questions, or anything outside normal pregnancy experience.

Comments

Loading comments...