HealthcareSWMS

Lone Worker — Healthcare SWMS

Lone work is pervasive in healthcare, occurring during community nursing visits, home-based disability support, after-hours hospital shifts with minimal staffing, community mental health crisis assessments, and rural and remote healthcare delivery. Lone workers face all standard healthcare hazards — aggression, manual handling, sharps, and chemicals — but without the immediate assistance of colleagues and with delayed emergency response times. The psychosocial impact of working alone in potentially hostile environments compounds the physical risks. This template covers lone worker management in healthcare settings with controls mapped to the binding Healthcare Code effective 1 July 2026.

Legal Requirements

regulation

WHS Regulation 2025 Part 3.1 — Remote and Isolated Work; Healthcare Code 2026

hrcw category

Lone and remote work

code of practice

Healthcare Code of Practice 2026 (binding 1 July 2026 under Section 26A)

section 26a binding

Yes — Healthcare code binding July 2026. Non-compliance is a standalone offence.

Hazards

HazardConsequenceLikelihood
Physical assault during community visit or after-hours shift with no colleagues presentSerious physical injury, delayed rescue, fatalityPossible
Medical emergency (worker's own health event) without anyone to call for helpDelayed treatment, adverse health outcomeUnlikely
Vehicle breakdown or accident in remote locations during community visitsStranding, delayed emergency responsePossible
Psychological distress from sustained isolation and fear during lone shiftsAnxiety, sleep disturbance, burnoutPossible
Inability to manage clinical emergency (patient deterioration) without assistanceAdverse patient outcome, psychological trauma for workerPossible

Controls (Hierarchy of Controls)

Conduct risk assessment for each lone work situation considering location, client history, and task requirements
Provide personal duress devices with GPS tracking for all community-based lone workers
Establish check-in protocol with defined intervals and escalation procedure for missed check-ins
Implement buddy system or two-person visits for high-risk clients and locations
Ensure lone workers have mobile phone coverage or satellite communication in remote areas
Provide training on personal safety, situational awareness, and de-escalation for lone workers
Restrict lone work for high-risk tasks — require minimum two workers for known aggressive clients

Recent Prosecutions

WorkSafe Victoria v Community Health Provider$220,000

Community nurse assaulted during home visit to client with known aggression history. Organisation had no lone worker policy, no duress devices, and no risk assessment for community visits.

2024WorkSafe Victoria Prosecution Database

What Your SWMS Must Include

Lone work risk assessment procedure for each work situation and location
Personal duress device specification and GPS tracking requirements
Check-in protocol with intervals, methods, and escalation for missed check-ins
Two-person visit criteria for high-risk clients and locations
After-hours communication and emergency response procedures

Related SWMS

Aggressive PatientManual Handling PatientInfection Control

Need a compliant Lone Worker SWMS?

Our WHS consultants develop lone worker SWMS with duress systems, check-in protocols, and risk assessment frameworks for healthcare settings.

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