Your Take-Home Toolkit
Everything you learned. Ready when you need it.
Print these. Save them to your phone. Keep them where you can find them. These resources could save your life.
Emergency Reference Materials
Print these NOW. Post them where you can see them. In an emergency, you won't have time to search.
One-Page Emergency Reference
The critical information on a single page. Red flags, decision rules, the 5 questions, emergency numbers. Print and post on your refrigerator.
Red Flags Quick Reference
Complete list of symptoms that require 911. Cardiac, neurological, abdominal, respiratory, pediatric emergencies. Keep in your medicine cabinet.
Essential Tools for Safe AI Use
Use these every time you consult AI about health. They're the difference between helpful information and dangerous advice.
Five Essential Questions Card
The questions that turn AI from dangerous to useful. Ask them every time. Question #2 has saved lives. Keep near your computer.
AI Use Decision Flowchart
Should you use AI or see a doctor? Follow this flowchart. Clear paths for symptoms, learning, and preparation. Reference before using AI for health.
Hallucination Detection Checklist
How to spot when AI is making things up. 8 red flags. Verification protocols. Protect yourself from false confidence. Use after getting AI responses.
Understanding the Principles
These guides explain the "why" behind the rules. Read them to deeply understand how to navigate AI in healthcare.
The Velociraptor Test Guide
Why your evolutionary wisdom beats algorithms. The 10 billion sensors principle. When to trust your gut over AI reassurance. Your body has been debugged by 3.8 billion years of evolution. AI's pattern recognition has been debugged by... training on text. Read to understand why your instincts matter.
Master Reference Guide
Complete summary of all 8 curriculum modules. Every key concept, decision rule, and framework in one comprehensive document. ~25 pages of everything you learned. Save for detailed reference.
Practical Tools
Ready-to-use tools for real situations. Print multiples. Use them.
Patient Preparation Worksheet
Organize your symptoms, medications, questions, and concerns before doctor appointments. Better preparation = better care. Print multiple copies. Complete before every appointment..
Quick Start Guide
Don't have time to read everything? This condensed guide covers the essentials. The one principle, the 5 questions, good vs bad uses. Keep on your phone for quick reference.
How to Use These Resources
Not sure which resource you need? This index explains what each one is for and when to use it. Complete guide to all 9 resources. What each one is, when to use it, printing recommendations, and how they work together.
For Your Home
-Post One-Page Emergency Reference on refrigerator
-Keep Red Flags Quick Reference in medicine cabinet
-Store Patient Preparation Worksheet copies near calendar
For Using AI
-Open Five Essential Questions Card every time you consult AI
-Reference AI Use Decision Flowchart before starting
-Use Hallucination Detection Checklist to verify responses
For Your Phone
-Save Quick Start Guide for instant access
-Bookmark this page for all resources
-Screenshot One-Page Emergency Reference
For Doctor Visits
-Complete Patient Preparation Worksheet before appointments
-Bring printed worksheet to visit
-Use AI to generate questions (per Module 8 guidelines)
Know someone who uses AI for health information? Share these resources.
The more people understand how to use AI safely, the fewer people will be harmed.
AI is for information and preparation, not diagnosis and treatment.
Use AI to prepare for medical care ✓ Use AI to avoid medical care ✗
Questions about these resources? Need clarification on any concept?
Questions about these resources? Need clarification on any concept?
Talk to your doctor. They’re your best resource for personalized medical guidance.
These materials educate about AI use. Your doctor provides your actual medical care.
Keep both relationships strong.
Ready to Learn More?
These resources support what you learned in the curriculum. Haven't completed the modules yet?
