Privacy, Consent and Chaperone in Healthcare Practice
Course DescriptionPrivacy, Consent and Chaperone in Healthcare Practice course focuses on protecting patient dignity, autonomy, and safety during clinical encounters, particularly those involving sensitive or intimate examinations. Issues relating to privacy breaches, unclear consent, or inappropriate chaperone use are common triggers for complaints and Ahpra notifications, even when no clinical error has occurred. This course explains why clear communication, respectful examination practices, and robust consent processes are central to trust, professionalism, and regulatory compliance in Australian healthcare.
The course is suitable for all healthcare professionals in Australia, including doctors, nurses, midwives, dentists, pharmacists, and allied health practitioners. It is particularly relevant for practitioners working in settings where sensitive examinations are common, those involved in boundary-related complaints or investigations, and those wishing to practise with greater confidence and consistency. The course takes a practical approach to everyday challenges, including obtaining informed consent, maintaining privacy in busy or constrained environments, using chaperones appropriately, addressing cultural and trauma-related sensitivities, and managing telehealth privacy.
By completing this course, participants will strengthen their ability to conduct examinations safely, respectfully, and in line with Ahpra and National Board expectations. Learners will gain clarity on how to communicate consent effectively, document interactions clearly, recognise and respond to patient discomfort, and reduce the risk of misunderstandings or complaints. The course supports reflective practice, remediation where required, and ongoing CPD, helping practitioners demonstrate professionalism, cultural safety, and trustworthy clinical behaviour in daily practice.