Prompt Engineering - How to Build a Personal Prompt Library for ObGyn Research and Writing
Every clinician who uses AI tools regularly eventually reaches the same realization: writing a good prompt from scratch every time is inefficient, and starting from a blank page consistently produces worse results than starting from a proven template. The solution is a personal prompt library: a curated collection of prompts that work, organized for easy retrieval, and gradually refined over time.
This course covers how to build that library, what to put in it, and how to use it to make your AI practice more efficient and more consistent.
Why a prompt library matters
A prompt library does for your AI practice what a well-organized procedure tray does for a clinical procedure. Everything you need is already prepared, in the right order, so you can focus on the specific task rather than the setup. Without it, you spend cognitive energy on prompt construction that should be going to the clinical or creative work.
There is a second, less obvious benefit. A prompt library makes your AI use consistent. When you develop a prompt that reliably produces high-quality patient education content, and you save and reuse that prompt, the quality of your patient education content becomes reproducible rather than dependent on how carefully you happened to construct the prompt on any given day. Consistency matters in clinical work, and it matters in AI-assisted clinical work too.



