Articles about NDIS documentation, progress notes, and best practices for support workers.
There are now dozens of AI tools marketing themselves to NDIS support workers. They are not all the same. The difference that matters most is whether the app will put words in your notes that you never said.
Read article →From 1 July 2026, all NDIS platform providers must be registered. That means your notes can be audited. Here's what's changing and how to prepare.
Read article →You talk about your shift. Clio turns it into a structured, audit-ready case note. Free for 100 days, then $15/month. No card to start.
Read article →Clio Care isn't ChatGPT with an NDIS prompt. It's a purpose-built compliance engine with incident detection, goal linking, and privacy filtering. Here's what happens behind the scenes.
Read article →Most NDIS apps are built for providers. If you're an individual support worker who just needs to write better notes faster, here's what's actually available.
Read article →Clio Care isn't a generic AI writer. It's built from 6 primary NDIS source documents. Here's how it works and why that matters for your documentation.
Read article →Your notes keep getting sent back. Here are the 6 most common reasons — missing goals, vague descriptions, no incident detail — and how to fix each one.
Read article →Standing in a doorway. Holding someone's hands. Taking away an iPad. You may be using a regulated restrictive practice without knowing it.
Read article →The 6 reportable incident categories, notification timeframes, required fields, and the mistakes that leave you exposed. Your record is your defence.
Read article →Your progress notes become the plan review report. If the notes are vague, the report is vague — and the participant's funding is at risk.
Read article →New to NDIS support work? Here's what you actually need to document, which sessions need case notes, and what the Practice Standards require.
Read article →Most support workers were never taught how to write progress notes. Here's what the main frameworks actually do, where they fall short, and which one was purpose-built for NDIS.
Read article →When a new worker takes over, they need to know what works, what to watch for, sensory triggers, BSP details, and key contacts. Here's what a good handover report looks like.
Read article →Individual reports tell you what happened. A summary tells you what's happening — patterns, frequency, triggers, and whether things are getting better or worse.
Read article →The NDIA doesn't want hours delivered. They want to know if the support is working. A goal progress report shows baseline, milestones, and evidence from real sessions.
Read article →If you work through Mable, your documentation is about to come under a lot more scrutiny. From 1 July 2026, your notes can be audited. Here's what's changing and how to prepare.
Read article →Most support workers write shift notes. NDIS auditors expect case notes. Here's the difference, why it matters for compliance, and how to make the switch before mandatory registration.
Read article →Most support workers have never seen an NDIS audit. But with mandatory registration starting July 2026, your documentation could be reviewed. Here's exactly what auditors check.
Read article →You don't need a Certificate III, a compliance workshop, or years of experience to write NDIS progress notes that pass an audit. Here's how to produce audit-ready documentation.
Read article →With mandatory registration starting July 2026, every note you write could be reviewed. Use this checklist to assess whether your notes would pass an audit.
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