Building Patient Care Plans and Programs

Most systems document care. Few systems deliver it. If you want better outcomes (and better notes), the fastest path is simple: change what happens between the chart entries by giving patients a clear plan of action.


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Why “Between Visits” Is the Real Care

The chart is essential—clinically, legally, operationally. But the chart isn’t where behavior changes. It’s where we record what we assessed, advised, and planned.

If you want to change what shows up in the chart over time (weight, A1c, symptoms, adherence, outcomes), you have to change what happens between the chart entries. That means patients need more than a note. They need a plan of action they can follow in real life.

Bottom line: The fastest way to improve outcomes is to make the plan clear, supported, and patient-facing—then evolve it over time.

Chart Plan vs. Care Plan

In most EMRs, the “Plan” is constrained to the P in a SOAP note. It has to be concise. It often reads like this:

Typical chart-level plan (concise and clinically sound)

  • Counsel on diet and lifestyle modifications
  • Encourage increased physical activity
  • Review sleep and stress strategies
  • Provide educational resources
  • Follow up in 6–8 weeks; consider medication options if needed

That’s a great chart note. But it’s not a great patient experience—because patients leave the visit asking: “What do I do today?”

A care plan solves that by translating intent into action

A care plan is where you put the patient-facing details that don’t belong in the chart: the daily steps, the supporting content, the structure, and the education path.

The Four Building Blocks of “The Plan”

A complete plan can be delivered in layers. Some patients only need one layer. Others benefit from stacking two or three.

1) Simple Care Plan

Immediate, situational guidance—what to do right now. Clear steps that can evolve as the patient progresses.

2) Drip Program

Pacing and reinforcement over time. Great when you don’t want to overwhelm the patient on day one.

3) Self-Paced Course

Structured education patients can complete at their own speed. Ideal for scalability and reuse.

4) Resource Library

An evergreen shelf of optional depth: videos, PDFs, recipes, exercises, FAQs, and more.

Key idea: These are not separate initiatives. They’re different delivery methods for the same “plan.”

The “Craft Table Shelves” Behind Every Plan

Whether you’re building a day in a drip course, a lesson in a self-paced course, a folder in a resource library, or a simple care plan, the methodology should feel consistent. The fastest systems work like a craft table: everything you need is organized on shelves within arm’s reach.

That means your reusable content is stored, organized, and ready to “drop in” anywhere: photos, PDFs, videos, exercises, recipes, tasks, forms/surveys, and reusable notes.

A Real-World Workflow (Mary Smith)

Here’s the workflow we demonstrate in the webinar—starting exactly where real clinicians start: the encounter.

  1. Encounter: You meet with Mary Smith. Labs and intake point to insulin resistance.
  2. Chart note: You document the assessment and a concise plan in the SOAP note.
  3. Care plan handoff: You move to the care plan page to translate intent into action.
  4. Immediate plan: You generate and paste a patient-friendly plan (with light edits).
  5. Support: You add a video or resource directly into the plan.
  6. Scale: You copy an existing template and/or build a program/course for education.
  7. Patient view: You preview exactly what the patient sees (plan only vs stacked layers).

Why this doesn’t add “another step”

The chart needs to remain concise. The patient needs clarity, structure, and reinforcement. The care plan is the layer that makes your intent actionable—without bloating the chart note.

Copy/Paste ChatGPT Prompts (Use These Live)

You don’t need “prompt engineering” to do this well. Use simple prompts that produce clear patient-facing content you can paste and format in seconds.

Prompt 1: Simple Care Plan (Immediate Actions)

Create a simple, patient-friendly care plan for someone with insulin resistance, focused on immediate lifestyle actions they can start today. Keep it practical, supportive, and easy to follow.
      

Prompt 2: Course Outline (Modules + Lessons)

Create a patient-friendly lesson outline for a self-paced course on insulin resistance recovery. Organize it into modules with 3–4 short lessons per module.
      

Prompt 3: Write One Lesson (Patient-Friendly)

Write a short, patient-friendly lesson explaining how the Mediterranean diet supports blood sugar balance. Avoid medical jargon and include practical examples.
      

Tip: If the output is too long, ask ChatGPT to rewrite it with headings and short bullet points.

Want a sandbox to build your own care plans and programs?

If you’d like to try out building a simple care plan or a course from our templates, create a free trial and try it free with no obligation for 30 days. No questions asked.

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