This policy sets out Safe Hands’s commitment to supporting participants through positive, evidence-based approaches and its obligations regarding the regulation, authorisation, reporting, and reduction of any restrictive practices used in the delivery of NDIS supports.
Safe Hands is committed to supporting all participants - including those with complex behaviour support needs - in a way that upholds their dignity, autonomy, and human rights. Positive behaviour support (PBS) is our preferred and primary approach to supporting participants whose behaviour may sometimes put themselves or others at risk.
We recognise that behaviours of concern often reflect unmet needs, communication difficulties, or an environment that is not working for the participant. Our goal is always to address the root cause - not just manage the behaviour.
Safe Hands has a zero-tolerance position on the use of any unauthorised restrictive practice. Any restrictive practice used without proper authorisation is a reportable incident and will result in immediate investigation and corrective action.
Under the NDIS Rules, a restrictive practice is any practice or intervention that has the effect of restricting the rights or freedom of movement of a person with disability. There are five regulated categories:
Confining a person alone in a room or area from which they cannot freely leave - even if called a “calm room” or “cool-down space.”
Use of medication to control or subdue behaviour, not for a genuine therapeutic or clinical purpose. This does not include medication prescribed for a diagnosed medical condition.
Use of a device to restrict a person’s movement - e.g. restraint straps, mittens used to prevent self-injurious behaviour without authorisation.
Use of physical force to restrict the free movement of a person - beyond the minimum necessary to prevent immediate harm to self or others.
Restricting access to part of an environment - e.g. locking a door to prevent a participant from accessing an area.
Note: Not all practices that look restrictive are regulated restrictive practices. Standard household safety measures (e.g. child-proof locks used for general safety) or therapeutic techniques in a clinical plan may not be regulated. If you are unsure, always ask the Director before implementing anything that restricts a participant’s freedom.
Positive Behaviour Support (PBS) is an evidence-based framework that focuses on understanding why a behaviour occurs and changing the environment, interactions, or supports to address the underlying need. PBS does not punish behaviour - it works to make behaviours of concern unnecessary.
Safe Hands’s PBS approach includes:
Participants who require behaviour support strategies must have a Behaviour Support Plan (BSP) developed by a qualified Behaviour Support Practitioner. Safe Hands does not develop BSPs internally - we implement them as directed by an independent, NDIS-registered Behaviour Support Practitioner.
Workers assigned to a participant with a BSP must:
A regulated restrictive practice may only be implemented if all of the following conditions are met:
If any one of these conditions is not met, the practice must not be implemented. Contact the Director immediately if you are unsure whether a practice is authorised. When in doubt, do not proceed.
In a genuine emergency where immediate physical restraint is used to prevent imminent harm to the participant or others, and where no authorisation exists in a BSP, the following must occur:
Emergency use of physical restraint does not authorise ongoing use of that practice. A BSP must be developed or updated to address the behaviour before any further restraint can be used.
Safe Hands is committed to the active reduction and elimination of restrictive practices over time, as required by the NDIS. We do this by:
| Event | Report To | Timeframe |
|---|---|---|
| Any use of a regulated restrictive practice (authorised) | NDIS Commission - as part of quarterly reporting | Within 5 business days of each quarter end |
| Use of an unauthorised restrictive practice | Manager immediately; NDIS Commission | Manager: same day. Commission: within 5 business days |
| Emergency physical restraint (no existing authorisation) | Manager immediately; NDIS Commission | Manager: same day. Commission: within 5 business days |
| Any injury to participant during a restrictive practice | 000 if serious; Manager; NDIS Commission | Immediate if serious injury; within 24 hours to Commission |
Workers supporting participants with behaviour support needs must complete: