/install seasonal-heat-safety-day-plan
Seasonal Heat Safety Day Plan
Purpose
Help the user prepare a one-day heat safety plan for hot weather, heat advisories, outdoor events, commuting, errands, school days, work shifts, or household care. The deliverable is a general planning checklist and day schedule that points to official heat safety resources and highlights emergency warning signs.
This is a prompt-only planning workflow. It is not medical advice, does not diagnose heat illness, and does not replace local emergency services, public health guidance, workplace safety rules, or advice from a qualified clinician.
Use This Skill When
Use this skill when the user wants to:
- Plan a safer routine for a very hot day or heat wave.
- Prepare for errands, commuting, outdoor work, sports, volunteering, school pickup, travel, or an event during high heat.
- Organize shade, cooling locations, water access, rest breaks, clothing, transport, backup contacts, and check-ins.
- Create a simple household plan for children, older adults, neighbors, pets, or people without reliable cooling.
- Convert a forecast or heat alert into a practical day plan without asking for medical decisions.
Do not use this skill to treat symptoms, decide whether a person is medically safe to work or exercise, recommend medications or supplements, alter fluid restrictions, give clinical triage beyond emergency warning signs, or override professional or local authority guidance.
Best Inputs
Ask only for details needed to make the plan practical. If details are missing, proceed with clear assumptions.
- Location or forecast summary, including heat advisory, HeatRisk, heat index, humidity, or expected hottest hours.
- Date, schedule, errands, commute, outdoor time, work shift, event, or school routine.
- People included in the plan and any non-medical access needs, such as mobility, language, transportation, caregiving, or cooling access.
- Cooling options: air conditioning, fans, shade, cooling centers, libraries, malls, community spaces, vehicle cooling, or a neighbor's home.
- Water access, rest break options, clothing constraints, indoor backup plans, and budget limits.
- Pets, outdoor equipment, power outage concerns, or communication needs.
Workflow
- Confirm scope and safety. State that the plan is general heat safety planning, not medical advice. If the user reports emergency warning signs, direct them to call local emergency services now before continuing.
- Check official sources. Encourage the user to verify local alerts and current guidance from official sources such as CDC Heat & Health, National Weather Service heat safety and HeatRisk, OSHA heat guidance for work, Ready.gov extreme heat, and local public health or emergency management pages.
- Map the day. Break the day into morning, midday, afternoon, evening, and overnight if relevant. Mark the hottest hours, outdoor exposure, travel, and times when cooling access may be limited.
- Reduce exposure. Move flexible tasks away from the hottest hours, add indoor or shaded alternatives, shorten outdoor blocks, and identify cancellation or delay triggers.
- Plan cooling and rest. Add cooling locations, shade, fans or air conditioning if available, rest breaks, lighter clothing, and check-ins. Keep language practical and non-clinical.
- Plan water access. Include reminders to bring and refill water and to follow any personal medical fluid guidance already provided by a clinician. Do not create individualized hydration prescriptions.
- Add household logistics. Cover transportation, phone charging, backup contacts, pet safety, power outage options, and who checks on whom.
- Add emergency warning signs. Include a clear box for signs that require urgent local emergency help, using official-source language in plain English.
- Create the final day plan. Provide a concise schedule, checklist, official resources, and open questions.
Output Format
Return the plan in this order:
- Heat Day Snapshot
| Field | Detail |
|---|---|
| Date and location | |
| Forecast or alert | |
| Hottest hours | |
| Main outdoor or travel blocks | |
| People or pets included | |
| Cooling options | |
| Assumptions |
- Official Resource Check
List the official resources the user should verify for their area:
- CDC Heat & Health: https://www.cdc.gov/heat-health/
- CDC Heat-Related Illnesses: https://www.cdc.gov/niosh/heat-stress/about/illnesses.html
- National Weather Service Heat Safety: https://www.weather.gov/safety/heat
- National Weather Service Heat Index: https://www.weather.gov/safety/heat-index
- OSHA Heat - Water. Rest. Shade. for workplace planning: https://www.osha.gov/heat-exposure/water-rest-shade
- Ready.gov Extreme Heat: https://www.ready.gov/heat
- Local public health, weather, emergency management, school, employer, or event organizer updates.
- Day Schedule
| Time block | Heat concern | Plan | Backup trigger |
|---|---|---|---|
| Morning | |||
| Midday | |||
| Afternoon | |||
| Evening | |||
| Overnight, if relevant |
- Cooling, Water, and Rest Checklist
Use checkboxes grouped by category:
Cooling:
[ ]
[ ]
[ ]
Water access:
[ ]
[ ]
[ ]
Rest and exposure:
[ ]
[ ]
[ ]
Communication and backup:
[ ]
[ ]
[ ]
- Emergency Warning Signs
Include this box, adapted to the user's context without weakening it:
GET URGENT LOCAL HELP NOW if someone has confusion, altered mental status, slurred speech, fainting or loss of consciousness, seizure, very high body temperature, hot dry skin or heavy sweating with severe symptoms, symptoms that are rapidly worsening, or any situation that feels dangerous. Call local emergency services.
Also note that heat exhaustion symptoms such as dizziness, weakness, headache, nausea, heavy sweating, thirst, irritability, elevated body temperature, or decreased urination should be taken seriously and checked against official guidance or a qualified clinician, especially if symptoms worsen or do not improve after leaving the heat.
- Open Questions
List missing details that would improve the plan, such as exact forecast, transportation, cooling center hours, event rules, work requirements, power outage risk, pet arrangements, or who needs check-ins.
Message Style
- Keep the plan concrete, calm, and easy to follow.
- Use plain English, tables, and checkboxes.
- Prefer official sources and local alerts over generic assumptions.
- Avoid medical certainty, diagnosis, treatment instructions, medication guidance, supplement advice, or individualized fluid targets.
- Respect budgets, renters, people without air conditioning, shift workers, caregivers, outdoor workers, and transportation limits.
- Make the smallest useful plan if the user is overwhelmed.
Safety Boundary
- This skill provides general planning only and is not medical advice.
- Do not diagnose heat stroke, heat exhaustion, dehydration, heat cramps, rhabdomyolysis, or any medical condition.
- Do not recommend medications, supplements, salt tablets, clinical cooling treatment, exertion clearance, or individualized hydration amounts.
- Do not advise anyone to ignore symptoms or continue work, exercise, travel, or caregiving duties when warning signs are present.
- If emergency warning signs are reported, tell the user to call local emergency services now.
- For persistent, new, worsening, severe, or concerning symptoms, suggest contacting a qualified clinician or local urgent care according to official guidance.
- For workplace situations, direct the user to employer procedures, OSHA or local occupational safety guidance, and emergency response protocols.
Example Prompts
- "Make me a heat safety plan for errands during tomorrow's heat advisory."
- "I have an outdoor event on a 100 degrees F day. Help me plan cooling breaks and backups."
- "Create a simple heat wave day plan for my family and dog."
- "Turn this forecast into a checklist for commuting and school pickup."
- Make sure OpenClaw is installed (local or Docker)
- Run the install command in chat:
/install seasonal-heat-safety-day-plan - After installation, invoke the skill by name or use
/seasonal-heat-safety-day-plan - Provide required inputs per the skill's parameter spec and get structured output
What is Seasonal Heat Safety Day Plan?
Create a practical seasonal heat safety day plan with weather checks, cooling options, hydration reminders, household logistics, official health resources, a... It is an AI Agent Skill for Claude Code / OpenClaw, with 34 downloads so far.
How do I install Seasonal Heat Safety Day Plan?
Run "/install seasonal-heat-safety-day-plan" in the OpenClaw or Claude Code chat to install it in one step — no extra setup required.
Is Seasonal Heat Safety Day Plan free?
Yes, Seasonal Heat Safety Day Plan is completely free, licensed under MIT-0. You can download, install and use it at no cost.
Which platforms does Seasonal Heat Safety Day Plan support?
Seasonal Heat Safety Day Plan is cross-platform and runs anywhere OpenClaw / Claude Code is available (cross-platform).
Who created Seasonal Heat Safety Day Plan?
It is built and maintained by haidong (@harrylabsj); the current version is v1.0.1.