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ai-gaoqian

Global Health & Biotech Intelligence

by ai-gaoqian · GitHub ↗ · v1.0.0 · MIT-0
cross-platform ✓ Security Clean
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Install in OpenClaw
/install global-health-intel
Description
Provides detailed, multi-source insights on global disease outbreaks, clinical trials, drug pipelines, health systems, regulations, and biomedical research.
README (SKILL.md)

Global Health & Biotech Intelligence

Capabilities

# Capability Input Output
1 Disease Outbreak Surveillance Country / pathogen / time range Cases, R0, CFR, geographic spread, genomic variants, WHO/CDC advisories
2 Clinical Trial Intelligence Drug / indication / phase / sponsor Trial design, enrollment, endpoints, results, N sites, cross-referenced across CT.gov/EU-CTR
3 Drug Pipeline Analysis Therapeutic area / mechanism / company Phase progression, likelihood-of-approval, competitive landscape, patent expiry, market forecast
4 Health Systems Benchmarking Countries (2-10) Expenditure %GDP, UHC index, outcomes (LE/HALE), workforce density, hospital beds, digital maturity
5 Biomedical Literature Synthesis Topic / PICOS query Systematic review-style summary, strength-of-evidence grading, conflicting findings flagged
6 Regulatory & Reimbursement Landscape Drug/device + jurisdiction Approval pathway, HTA assessment, pricing & access, post-market surveillance requirements
7 Longevity & Aging Science Monitor Intervention / pathway Preclinical–clinical pipeline, mechanism-of-action, biomarker effects, safety signals
8 Digital Health & AI MedTech Radar Category + region Regulatory classification (SaMD), clinical evidence maturity, reimbursement status, competitive scan
9 Vaccine Development Dashboard Pathogen / platform (mRNA/viral vector/etc) Phase status, efficacy data, manufacturing capacity, cold-chain requirements, variant coverage
10 Health Policy Comparative Analysis Policy area + countries Legal framework, funding mechanism, implementation status, outcomes data, stakeholder positions

Workflow

User Query
  │
  ├─ [Step 1] Triage query → identify domain(s) from 9 disease categories + 4 analysis types
  │
  ├─ [Step 2] Execute parallel search across relevant sources:
  │   └─ Official sources (WHO GHO, CDC, NIH/FDA/EMA) for regulatory + epidemiological
  │   └─ Trial registries (CT.gov, EU-CTR) for clinical pipeline
  │   └─ Literature (PubMed, medRxiv) for evidence base
  │   └─ Analytics (IHME GBD, Our World in Data) for population-level metrics
  │
  ├─ [Step 3] Data fusion: cross-reference across sources, flag discrepancies
  │
  ├─ [Step 4] Quality assessment: GRADE framework for evidence, QC for data freshness (\x3C30-day recency preferred)
  │
  ├─ [Step 5] Structured output generation per domain template
  │
  └─ [Step 6] Cite all sources with URLs, publish dates, and data vintage

Output Formats

Disease Outbreak Brief

Field Content
Pathogen/Syndrome Name, taxonomy, known variants
Epidemiological Snapshot Cases, deaths, CFR, R0/Rt, doubling time
Geographic Distribution Affected regions, hot zones, importation risk
Countermeasures Vaccines (available/in-development), therapeutics, diagnostics
Public Health Measures WHO PHEIC status, travel advisories, NPIs
Sources URLs + retrieval dates

Drug Pipeline Matrix

Drug (Company) Mechanism Phase Key Endpoints PDUFA/Decision Date LoA Est. Notes
... ... ... ... ... ... ...

Health Systems Comparison Table

Indicator Country A Country B Country C OECD Avg
Health exp. %GDP
UHC Service Coverage Index
Life expectancy at birth
Physicians per 1,000
Hospital beds per 1,000
Out-of-pocket % health spend

Usage Guidelines

  1. Always query multiple sources — no single database covers all needed dimensions
  2. Temporal context is critical — include data vintage for all epidemiological and regulatory content
  3. Non-expert accessible — translate medical terminology on first use; append glossary for complex topics
  4. Risk-appropriate framing — distinguish between peer-reviewed consensus, preprints, and commercial forecasts
  5. Regulatory disclaimer — this skill provides intelligence, not medical advice; include disclaimer for drug/device content
  6. Multi-language capability — search and summarize across English, Chinese, Japanese, French, Spanish, German, Arabic

Examples

Example 1: Drug Pipeline Query

User: "What's the competitive landscape for GLP-1 receptor agonists beyond obesity?" Output: Table of Phase 2/3 trials for cardiovascular, NASH/MASH, kidney disease, Alzheimer's, addiction indications; partnership/collaboration map; market size projections by indication.

Example 2: Outbreak Intelligence

User: "Track the latest on H5N1 avian influenza in 2026" Output: WHO/CDC case counts, mammal spillover events, vaccine stockpile status, genomic surveillance findings, pandemic risk assessment tier.

Example 3: Health System Comparison

User: "Compare US, UK, and Singapore health systems on efficiency and outcomes" Output: Multi-indicator comparison table; spending vs. outcomes scatter analysis; key structural differences (funding model, gatekeeping, provider payment).


Data Base: references/health_sources.json — 12 authoritative data sources, 9 disease domains, 8 health system countries, drug development phase reference data. Last Updated: June 2026 Free Tier: Available. This skill aggregates public health intelligence; no proprietary data accessed. (内容由AI生成,仅供参考)

Usage Guidance
Reasonable to install if you want research assistance for public health and biotech topics. Verify important medical, regulatory, or investment-sensitive conclusions against cited primary sources and professional advice, especially because the bundled reference data may become stale.
Capability Assessment
Purpose & Capability
The stated purpose is health and biotech intelligence using public sources; the capabilities, examples, and reference list all align with that purpose.
Instruction Scope
Instructions focus on querying multiple public authoritative sources, cross-checking evidence, citing data vintage, and adding medical/regulatory disclaimers.
Install Mechanism
The package contains only a markdown skill file and a reference data file, with no executable scripts or dependency installs. The reference JSON has a trailing AI-generated disclaimer outside the JSON object, which is a quality/tooling issue rather than a security issue.
Credentials
Network research across public health, trial, literature, and regulatory sources is proportionate to the skill purpose; users should still treat health outputs as research support, not medical advice.
Persistence & Privilege
No persistence, background workers, local indexing, privilege escalation, credential/session access, or mutation authority is requested.
How to Use
  1. Make sure OpenClaw is installed (local or Docker)
  2. Run the install command in chat: /install global-health-intel
  3. After installation, invoke the skill by name or use /global-health-intel
  4. Provide required inputs per the skill's parameter spec and get structured output
Version History
v1.0.0
Global-health-intel 1.0.0 – Initial Release - Introduces comprehensive health & biotech intelligence capabilities: disease outbreak tracking, clinical trials, drug pipeline, health system benchmarking, literature synthesis, regulatory/reimbursement analysis, longevity science, digital health/AI radar, vaccine monitoring, and policy comparison. - Structured workflow: automated query triage, parallel data gathering from official/global sources, cross-referencing, evidence grading (GRADE framework), and transparent output with citations. - Supports multiple output formats, incl. outbreak briefs, drug pipeline matrices, and health system comparison tables. - Usage guidelines emphasize source triangulation, timeliness, accessibility, and clear risk framing with a regulatory disclaimer. - Designed for global users: multi-language search/summarization and a focus on explainability for non-experts.
Metadata
Slug global-health-intel
Version 1.0.0
License MIT-0
All-time Installs 0
Active Installs 0
Total Versions 1
Frequently Asked Questions

What is Global Health & Biotech Intelligence?

Provides detailed, multi-source insights on global disease outbreaks, clinical trials, drug pipelines, health systems, regulations, and biomedical research. It is an AI Agent Skill for Claude Code / OpenClaw, with 37 downloads so far.

How do I install Global Health & Biotech Intelligence?

Run "/install global-health-intel" in the OpenClaw or Claude Code chat to install it in one step — no extra setup required.

Is Global Health & Biotech Intelligence free?

Yes, Global Health & Biotech Intelligence is completely free, licensed under MIT-0. You can download, install and use it at no cost.

Which platforms does Global Health & Biotech Intelligence support?

Global Health & Biotech Intelligence is cross-platform and runs anywhere OpenClaw / Claude Code is available (cross-platform).

Who created Global Health & Biotech Intelligence?

It is built and maintained by ai-gaoqian (@ai-gaoqian); the current version is v1.0.0.

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