AI's ability to understand context—recognizing that your "we need to move faster" means something different depending on whether you're in product planning versus customer support—is what separates useful assistance from generic responses. Providing clear context about your goals, constraints, and what success looks like dramatically improves the quality of AI output.
Context is everything when asking AI for help as a caregiver. Think of context like the backstory a friend needs before you ask them for advice. "My mom keeps forgetting to take her afternoon medication" means something completely different than "My mom is refusing all medications because she doesn't think she's sick." Same problem, totally different solutions.
Context is all the background information that helps AI understand your specific situation: the person's age, health conditions, living situation, family support, cognitive abilities, cultural preferences, dietary restrictions, and past experiences.
Without context, AI gives generic advice. With context, it gives advice tailored to your reality.
Generic advice: "Create a medication reminder system."
With context: "Your parent has mild memory loss but strong routine, lives alone, and doesn't use smartphones. Try: labeling pill bottles by meal time, setting a daily 5 PM phone call reminder from you, and having a physical checklist posted on the fridge."
See the difference? The second answer actually works for your situation.
When you ask AI for caregiving help, spend 30 seconds providing context upfront: Who are you caring for? What's their main challenge? What's already been tried? What works and doesn't work in your family? What resources do you have?
It sounds like extra work, but it saves hours of bad advice and failed attempts.
Instead of: "How do I manage multiple medications?"
Try: "I'm managing medications for my 82-year-old parent with arthritis, early memory loss, and strong habits. They prefer simple routines and don't use technology. We see three different doctors. What system would actually work for us?"
The AI will now suggest solutions that fit your specific constraints instead of generic pill organizers.
Try this: Write a 3-sentence description of the person you're caring for and their main challenge. Include one constraint (like "no technology" or "limited mobility"). Then ask ChatGPT or Claude for caregiving advice about that specific situation. Notice how much more relevant the answers become.
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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