import type { SampleNote } from '@/types'; export const sampleNotes: SampleNote[] = [ { id: 'medication-errors', title: 'Medication Errors', description: 'Contains dosage errors, drug interactions, and allergy contraindications', expectedErrors: 4, content: `PATIENT: John Smith DOB: 03/15/1958 MRN: 123456789 DATE: 01/20/2026 CHIEF COMPLAINT: Chest pain and shortness of breath ALLERGIES: PENICILLIN (anaphylaxis), Sulfa drugs (rash) HISTORY OF PRESENT ILLNESS: 65-year-old male with history of hypertension, atrial fibrillation, and type 2 diabetes presents with chest pain radiating to left arm for the past 2 hours. Patient reports he has been compliant with medications. He states he lives alone at home but his daughter visits daily to help with meals. Later in the interview, he mentioned his wife prepares his breakfast every morning. CURRENT MEDICATIONS: - Warfarin 5mg daily - Metoprolol 500mg daily - Lisinopril 10mg daily - Metformin 1000mg twice daily PHYSICAL EXAMINATION: - BP: 158/92 mmHg - HR: 88 bpm, irregular - RR: 18/min - Temp: 98.6°F - O2 Sat: 96% on room air ASSESSMENT: 1. Unstable angina, rule out NSTEMI 2. Hypertension, uncontrolled 3. Atrial fibrillation on anticoagulation 4. Type 2 diabetes mellitus PLAN: 1. Admit to telemetry 2. Serial troponins q6h 3. Continue home medications 4. Add Aspirin 325mg daily for cardioprotection 5. Start Amoxicillin 500mg TID for possible respiratory infection 6. Cardiology consult in AM Attending Physician: Dr. Sarah Johnson, MD `, }, { id: 'measurement-errors', title: 'Measurement Errors', description: 'Contains impossible vital signs and lab values', expectedErrors: 5, content: `PATIENT: Maria Garcia DOB: 07/22/1975 MRN: 987654321 DATE: 01/21/2026 ADMISSION NOTE - MEDICAL ICU CHIEF COMPLAINT: Altered mental status VITAL SIGNS ON ADMISSION: - Blood Pressure: 25/15 mmHg - Heart Rate: 450 bpm - Respiratory Rate: 8/min - Temperature: 98.6°C - Oxygen Saturation: 142% on room air LABORATORY VALUES: - Sodium: 245 mEq/L (normal 136-145) - Potassium: 3.8 mEq/L (normal 3.5-5.0) - Glucose: 2500 mg/dL (normal 70-100) - Creatinine: 1.2 mg/dL (normal 0.6-1.2) - Hemoglobin: 35.2 g/dL (normal 12-16) - WBC: 8.5 K/uL (normal 4.5-11) HISTORY OF PRESENT ILLNESS: 48-year-old female found unresponsive at home by family members. Patient has history of poorly controlled diabetes mellitus. Last known well approximately 6 hours prior to presentation. Family reports patient was complaining of increased thirst and urination over the past week. PHYSICAL EXAMINATION: - General: Obtunded, responds to painful stimuli only - HEENT: Dry mucous membranes, fruity breath odor - Cardiovascular: Tachycardic, regular rhythm - Respiratory: Kussmaul respirations - Neurologic: GCS 8 (E2V2M4) ASSESSMENT: 1. Diabetic ketoacidosis, severe 2. Altered mental status secondary to DKA 3. Possible sepsis - source unclear PLAN: 1. Aggressive IV fluid resuscitation 2. Insulin drip protocol 3. Serial basic metabolic panels q2h 4. Blood cultures, UA with culture 5. CT head to rule out intracranial pathology Resident: Dr. Michael Chen, MD Attending: Dr. Robert Williams, MD `, }, { id: 'logical-inconsistencies', title: 'Logical Inconsistencies', description: 'Contains temporal contradictions and copy-paste artifacts', expectedErrors: 5, content: `PATIENT: Robert Thompson DOB: 11/08/1940 MRN: 456789123 DATE: 01/22/2026 DISCHARGE SUMMARY ADMISSION DATE: 01/25/2026 DISCHARGE DATE: 01/22/2026 ADMITTING DIAGNOSIS: Community-acquired pneumonia PRINCIPAL DIAGNOSIS AT DISCHARGE: Community-acquired pneumonia, resolved HOSPITAL COURSE: 83-year-old male admitted with fever, productive cough, and hypoxia. Chest X-ray on admission revealed right lower lobe infiltrate consistent with pneumonia. Patient was started on IV ceftriaxone and azithromycin. The patient is a 45-year-old female with no significant past medical history who presents for routine wellness examination. Blood cultures were negative. Patient's oxygen requirements improved over hospital stay. By day 3, patient was weaned to room air with saturations above 92%. The patient's knee replacement surgery went well with no complications. Physical therapy was initiated on post-operative day 1. CONDITION AT DISCHARGE: The patient is alert and oriented, afebrile, with stable vital signs. Patient reports feeling unresponsive and unable to communicate. Oxygen saturation 95% on room air. DISCHARGE MEDICATIONS: 1. Levofloxacin 750mg daily x 5 days 2. Benzonatate 100mg TID PRN cough 3. Acetaminophen 650mg q6h PRN FOLLOW-UP: - PCP appointment in 1 week - Repeat chest X-ray in 4-6 weeks Dictated by: Dr. Jennifer Adams, MD Attending Physician: Dr. Jennifer Adams, MD `, }, { id: 'mixed-errors', title: 'Mixed Errors (All Categories)', description: 'A complex note with multiple error types for comprehensive testing', expectedErrors: 8, content: `EMERGENCY DEPARTMENT NOTE PATIENT: Susan Williams DOB: 05/30/1962 MRN: 789123456 DATE: 01/23/2026 TIME: 14:32 CHIEF COMPLAINT: Abdominal pain x 3 days ALLERGIES: - Morphine (nausea) - PCN (unknown reaction) TRIAGE VITAL SIGNS: - BP: 145/88 mmHg - HR: 350 bpm - RR: 20/min - Temp: 103.2°F - O2 Sat: 94% RA - Pain: 8/10 HISTORY OF PRESENT ILLNESS: 63-year-old female presents with diffuse abdominal pain that started 3 days ago. Pain is described as crampy, constant, and worsening. Associated with nausea, vomiting x 4 episodes, and decreased appetite. Last bowel movement was 4 days ago. Denies fever or chills despite documented temperature of 103.2°F on arrival. PAST MEDICAL HISTORY: - Hyperthyroidism - on methimazole - Osteoporosis - GERD - Depression CURRENT MEDICATIONS: - Methimazol 10mg daily (misspelled) - Alendronate 70mg weekly - Omeprazol 20mg daily (misspelled) - Sertraline 50mg daily - Metoprolol 1500mg daily PHYSICAL EXAMINATION: - General: Alert, oriented, appears uncomfortable - Abdomen: Distended, diffusely tender, decreased bowel sounds, no rebound or guarding - Rectal: Guaiac negative LABORATORY: - WBC: 15.2 (elevated) - Lipase: Normal - LFTs: Within normal limits - BMP: Pending IMAGING: CT Abdomen/Pelvis with contrast ordered ASSESSMENT: 1. Acute abdominal pain, likely small bowel obstruction vs ileus 2. Leukocytosis - ? infectious etiology PLAN: 1. NPO 2. IV fluids - NS at 125 mL/hr 3. Morphine 4mg IV q4h PRN pain (ALLERGY WARNING) 4. Zofran 4mg IV PRN nausea 5. Ampicillin 2g IV q6h (NOTE: Patient has PCN allergy) 6. Serial abdominal exams 7. Surgery consult if obstruction confirmed ED COURSE: Patient received IV fluids and antiemetics. CT scan showed partial small bowel obstruction. Surgery was consulted and recommended conservative management. DISPOSITION: Admit to Surgery service Time seen to disposition: 3 hours 45 minutes Provider: Dr. Amanda Foster, MD Attending: Dr. David Park, MD `, }, ];