From nejm-skills
Writes NEJM-style structured abstracts with four headed sections (Background, Methods, Results, Conclusions), ≤250 words, including trial registration number and funding source. For late-stage polish of research manuscripts.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/nejm-skills:nejm-abstractThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
- Significance, design, reporting, and statistics are settled (do this late).
NEJM uses a structured abstract, ≤250 words, with four headed sections. Confirm the exact cap against the current author guidelines; design for 250 as the ceiling.
One or two sentences: the clinical problem and the specific question. State why the question matters in practice — no extended literature review.
Design (e.g., "randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial"), population and setting, intervention/comparator, randomization, the pre-specified primary outcome and key secondary outcomes, and the analysis population (intention-to-treat).
Lead with the primary outcome. Report the effect size with a 95% confidence interval — absolute difference and/or relative measure (hazard ratio, risk ratio, odds ratio) — plus the P value if used. Give the number analyzed per group. Report key secondary outcomes and serious adverse events. Numbers, not adjectives.
One or two sentences answering the question, calibrated to the evidence. Name the comparator. End with the trial registration number and the funding source.
BACKGROUND
[Clinical problem]. It is unknown whether [intervention] improves [patient-important
outcome] in [population].
METHODS
We conducted a [design, e.g., multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled]
trial. We randomly assigned [N] patients with [condition] to [intervention] or
[comparator]. The primary outcome was [outcome] at [time]. Analyses were performed
according to the intention-to-treat principle.
RESULTS
The primary outcome occurred in X of N patients ([x.x]%) in the [intervention] group and
in Y of N ([y.y]%) in the [comparator] group (absolute difference, [z.z] percentage points;
95% CI, [a] to [b]; hazard ratio, [h]; 95% CI, [c] to [d]; P=[p]). [Key secondary outcome].
[Serious adverse events by group].
CONCLUSIONS
Among patients with [condition], [intervention] [did/did not] [effect on outcome] as
compared with [comparator]. (Funded by [funder]; [TrialName] ClinicalTrials.gov number,
NCT00000000.)
Use this as a second-pass capability check. First lock the clinical question, population, endpoint, effect size, safety signal, and practice implication; then test whether the manuscript addresses clinical-medicine reviewers who expect practice-changing evidence, patient relevance, safety, and exact reporting discipline.
claim / evidence / blocker / next edit rows so the next pass can patch the manuscript directly.resources/official-source-map.md for volatile rules and name the one unresolved fact that could change the recommendation.【Word count】 N ≤ 250
【Four sections present】 Background / Methods / Results / Conclusions — yes/no
【Primary outcome with effect + 95% CI】 yes/no + the numbers
【ITT + per-group n stated】 yes/no
【Registration number present】 yes/no (NCT…)
【Funding source present】 yes/no
【Acronym / citation hits removed】 [...]
【Next】 nejm-citation
npx claudepluginhub brycewang-stanford/awesome-journal-skills --plugin nejm-skillsFormats unstructured abstracts into The Lancet's structured format (Background, Methods, Findings, Interpretation, Funding) with ≤300 words, effect sizes, 95% CIs, registration number, and funder.
Enforces JAMA structured abstract headings and Key Points box format with quantified results, effect sizes, and 95% CIs.
Structures and tightens NEJM Original Articles into terse IMRAD format with short main text, limited references, claim-first results, and sober discussion with limitations.