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Use AI only to organize questions. Let emergency services, a trusted adult, or a clinician decide what care is needed.
A chatbot cannot see the person, check vital signs, know the full history, or take responsibility for the outcome. If the situation feels urgent, dangerous, confusing, or fast-changing, get a trusted adult or medical professional involved immediately.
Use a real but low-risk workflow from your day. Treat AI as a drafting and organizing layer, then verify the output before anyone relies on it.
15 questions · take it digitally for instant feedback at tendril.neural-forge.io/learn/quiz/end-builders-healthcare-AI-and-er-vs-urgent-care-decider-r8a9-teen
What does the term 'triage' mean in healthcare?
What is the main reason the lesson suggests using AI to help decide between ER and urgent care?
Which of the following symptoms should ALWAYS trigger a call to 911 instead of visiting urgent care?
Why does the lesson recommend saving three specific phone numbers in your phone?
What are the '3 questions' the lesson suggests asking AI when deciding between ER and urgent care?
If someone has severe bleeding that won't stop, what does the lesson say to do?
What does the lesson mean by saying 'real builders ship'?
Why might someone choose urgent care over the ER for a non-life-threatening issue?
What information should you ask AI about regarding your local urgent care?
What is one reason the lesson gives for using AI in healthcare decision-making?
What does the lesson say about chest pain specifically?
What is the 'nurse hotline' mentioned in the lesson used for?
What key concept does the lesson connect with cost and urgency in healthcare?
The lesson mentions 'stroke signs' as a reason to call 911. What does this indicate about stroke symptoms?
What does the lesson suggest doing TODAY after learning about this topic?