The details you record in care notes—how someone responded emotionally, what time of day they struggled, which topics triggered them—become crucial context that AI systems need to make accurate decisions. Notes that feel like busywork actually shape whether an automated system gets the person right or makes a harmful recommendation.
Think of AI context like briefing a consultant before a meeting. If you just ask, "What should I feed this person?" the consultant has no idea. But if you say, "They're 82, have diabetes and kidney disease, live alone, and can only use one hand," suddenly the consultant can give you useful advice. Context is what transforms generic advice into personalized help.
Context is the background information that helps AI understand your specific situation. For caregiving, context includes: the person's age, diagnoses, medications, living situation, mobility level, how much help they have, their preferences, cultural background, and budget. It's all the details that make their situation unique.
The more context you provide upfront, the better the AI can tailor its output. If you tell an AI, "I'm a caregiver for someone with dementia who wanders," it understands a completely different set of challenges than "I'm a caregiver for someone recovering from knee surgery." Same role, totally different advice needed.
Generic caregiving advice is often useless. "Make sure they take their medications" is nice, but what if they have cognitive decline and forget? "Keep them active" is good in theory, but what if they're in a wheelchair? Context lets AI give advice that actually works for your situation, not just advice that works in theory.
The irony is that providing context takes more effort upfront—you have to type or explain more. But it saves huge amounts of time because you don't have to filter through irrelevant suggestions later.
Don't dump everything at once. Start with the essentials: age, main health conditions, living situation, and your biggest challenge right now. Let the AI ask follow-up questions if it needs more. It's a conversation, not an interrogation.
Also, update the context as things change. If a health condition gets worse or a new medication starts, tell the AI. What worked last month might not be ideal now.
Try this: Write a paragraph describing the person you're caring for and your main caregiving challenge. Include age, health conditions, living setup, and what's hardest right now. Paste it into an AI tool and say: "Based on this context, what's one thing I should focus on this week?" You'll notice how much more relevant the answer is.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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