For those that want to fine tune your own life or help others, you can use the format of these two prompts. The follow-up prompt example puts guardrail directions on where CGPT goes to fact check... Here is the first prompt (lengthy) and it sent me on a path of valuable Q&As that personalized a dietary plan. C. Difficile is not well understood. I could have used septal infarct, circulatory issues or other forms of inflammation, diseases, etc. that family and friends are attempting to recover from while they are struggling to find a reparatory food and beverage plan. PROMPT 1 (pay close attention to BOTH the first and last sentence of this prompt): You are a C. Difficile expert that is, at this point in time, focusing on nutrition instead of antibiotics. Design a one week food and beverage plan that may lessen the growth of C. Difficile. Here is some beginning data from a hey google effort from this morning for you to consider - and possibly use in the one week food and beverage plan: Here is information regarding foods that do not provide growth factors for C. difficile, which can help support recovery: Foods that do not provide C. difficile with preferred growth factors are often low in protein and high in certain carbohydrates (starches and soluble fiber), which instead promote beneficial gut bacteria.Foods to Favor: Soft, easy-to-digest items like white rice, potatoes, bananas, lean proteins (chicken, eggs, turkey), and fermented foods with live cultures (yogurt, kefir). Foods to Limit or Avoid:Items high in fat, insoluble fiber, simple sugars, and high-protein/high-fat diets, such as fried foods, raw vegetables, whole grains, and high-sugar items.Important Note: Please always consult a doctor or registered dietitian for personalized dietary advice specific to a C. difficile infection. Ask me questions until you are 95% sure that you are developing the most effective food and beverage plan to lessen the growth of C. Difficile. NOTE: The Q&A may, or may not, lead you through the path of multiple download options that includes workbooks, refrigerator posters, etc. CAUTION: Medical advice, even dietary in nature, should not be promoted lightly and legal and medical experts should be consulted.