Create a one-glance medication strip with big text, clear times, and measurable tools: teaspoons become milliliters, and droppers match the numbers shown. A mother once said the shaded morning sun and moon icons finally ended spoon mishaps. Add a what-if box for missed doses, and families stop guessing, start trusting, and keep rhythms steady even on unpredictable days.
A flowchart can replace long paragraphs by guiding decisions step by step: if fever climbs above a certain number, then call; if pain eases, continue rest. Use generous white space and verbs that feel doable. One caregiver stuck our three-box asthma plan on the fridge, reporting fewer midnight panics because the next step waited quietly, already drawn and ready.
Choose symbols that cross languages and age groups: a pill, a glass of water, a telephone, a clock face. Test them with people, not just designers. We once swapped a confusing droplet icon for a labeled syringe graphic and saw questions drop dramatically. When icons match lived realities, they become gentle guides, not riddles, and confidence grows where fog once lingered.
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