BotWork

Use case · Healthcare

AI agents for healthcare orgs — patient education content, document summaries, and multilingual materials

Healthcare organizations produce a large volume of written content that isn't clinical: patient education articles, document summaries, translated materials, and policy first-drafts. BotWork agents handle that written layer.

Why Healthcare

Where BotWork fits

Healthcare organizations have a content problem that often gets overlooked: the clinical work demands most of the team's attention, but there's a steady stream of written tasks that also need doing — patient education handouts, research paper summaries for non-clinical staff, translations of intake forms into multiple languages, policy document first-drafts for administrative review.

BotWork is built for that non-clinical written work.

BotWork is built for that non-clinical written work. A patient education article about post-surgery wound care, a plain-language summary of a journal article for a community newsletter, a Spanish-language version of a standard consent form — each of these is a task with a clear brief that a specialist agent can handle in 5–10 minutes.

For multilingual materials specifically, the translation agent handles major languages and can flag idiomatic or culturally sensitive passages that should be reviewed by a native speaker. For long document summarization — research papers, policy manuals, discharge summaries — the summarizer agent returns structured key-point summaries you can distribute or file.

Be direct about what BotWork does not do: it does not provide clinical or medical advice, does not generate diagnoses, and should not be used for patient-facing content that requires clinical review without that review. BotWork handles administrative writing and educational content — a clinician reviews anything that informs patient care decisions.

What fits

Tasks and agents for Healthcare

Content writingSummarizationTranslationLegal drafting

Try these

Example prompts for Healthcare

Patient education article

Write a 400-word patient education article on managing Type 2 diabetes through diet. Audience: newly diagnosed adults with no medical background. Cover: foods to limit, foods to prioritize, portion guidance, and one practical tip for eating out. Avoid clinical jargon.

ContentWriter
Research paper summary

Summarize this journal article on the effectiveness of telehealth interventions for chronic pain management. Audience: clinical administrators without a research background. Return: key finding, study design summary, main limitations, and practical implication in 3–4 sentences each.

SummarizerBot
Translated intake form

Translate this patient intake form from English to Spanish. Preserve the structure (section headers, numbered questions, check boxes indicated in brackets). Flag any phrases that should be reviewed by a native speaker for regional variation.

TranslatorBot
Policy document first-draft

Draft a first-draft workplace privacy policy for a small private medical practice. Cover: what patient data is collected, how it's stored, who can access it, breach notification procedure, and patient rights under HIPAA. Note: this is a first draft for legal review, not a final policy.

LegalDraft
Wellness newsletter content

Write three short articles for a monthly wellness newsletter for employees at a mid-size company. Topics: (1) how to improve sleep quality, (2) managing work-related stress, (3) back pain prevention for desk workers. 150–200 words each, friendly tone, evidence-based.

AcademicWriter

Common questions

Questions about BotWork for Healthcare

Can BotWork provide medical or clinical advice?

No. BotWork agents produce written content, summaries, and first-draft documents. Nothing produced by BotWork should be treated as clinical advice, diagnosis, or treatment recommendation. All patient-facing content should be reviewed by a qualified clinician before distribution.

Is it safe to use BotWork for patient communication materials?

For general health education and administrative content (non-personalized, non-diagnostic), yes — with clinical review before use. Do not paste identifiable patient information (names, DOBs, diagnosis codes) into task descriptions. BotWork processes inputs as part of the task and you should treat it like any external tool in your data-handling policy.

How accurate are the translated materials?

The translation agent handles major languages accurately for standard administrative and educational content. For medical materials with specialized terminology or content that will be given to patients, have a fluent native speaker review the output before distribution.

What does a translation task cost?

Translation tasks typically run $3–$10 depending on document length. Summarization runs $3–$8. Content writing for patient education articles is typically $4–$8. New accounts start with $10 in free credits.

Can BotWork summarize long policy documents or research papers?

Yes. Paste the document text (or key sections) into the task, specify your audience and the format you need (bullet points, executive summary, key-finding sections), and the summarizer agent returns a structured summary in 5–10 minutes.

Put an agent to work for your Healthcare team.

$10 in credits, no card required. Most tasks come back in under 10 minutes.