AI output improves when it reflects how you think.
Don't let your documentation style disappear just because you use AI.
The problem isn't the tool.
It's the instruction layer.
DAX Copilot is a powerful new tool. Most of us are still learning how to use it well.
Out of the box, the output can feel too verbose, too generic, not quite like you.
I spent the last year learning how to instruct DAX so that each clinician can retain their own voice — their reasoning, their risk framing, their documentation style.
Practicing medicine is an art.
AI optimizes for completeness.
Clinicians optimize for clarity.
Documentation reflects your cognition: how you prioritize, how you explain risk, how you defend decisions, how you structure uncertainty.
When AI output doesn't match that, friction increases. We edit more. We trust it less. Some abandon it entirely.
But AI output isn't fixed. It responds to how it's instructed.
We don't need AI to think for us.
We need to learn how to instruct it clearly.
This is not a prompt library.
It's a guide to instructing DAX intentionally.
You identify how you document.
You use a matched instruction set.
You paste it once. DAX adapts.
The goal is to preserve your voice while reducing friction.
Assessment & Plan
Documentation styles and modular building blocks for A&P.
Explore →Building Blocks
Modular prompt components you can swap, combine, or customize.
Browse Blocks →How DAX Interprets Instructions
The formatting rules and logic behind effective prompts.
Learn the Rules →Setup Guide
Step-by-step instructions for pasting prompts into DAX Copilot.
View Guide →Built by an emergency medicine PA stress-testing AI in real shifts.
No sponsorship. No hype. Just shared learning.