How CampCard builds the handoff plan
CampCard uses a fixed ruleset that combines trip type, age band, support need, weather, water activity, clothes-handling mode, and handoff style. The goal is not to “score” the family. The goal is to surface the most practical bag, handoff, and label decisions first.
Decision structure
- Trip type sets the base pack logic: day, overnight, school-trip, or sports-day.
- Support need adds the main handoff risk: allergies, medication, reassurance, sensory comfort, spare clothes, or swim confidence.
- Weather and water activity modify spare layers, towel logic, sunscreen placement, and dry-bag separation.
- Handoff style changes the advice for what must be spoken aloud versus what can live in the written card.
- Priority shifts the result toward speed, comfort, independence, or least-forgotten essentials.
What the planner intentionally avoids
- No medical dosing advice.
- No claim that the output satisfies a camp or school policy.
- No persistent storage or lead-capture flow in this MVP.
- No fake precision score.
Why this shape
The common failure mode in child handoffs is rarely “I had zero items.” It is “the right item was buried, the key detail never reached staff, or the backup plan was in the wrong bag.” CampCard is designed around that friction, so the output focuses on order, visibility, and communication.