The terms "progress note" and "clinical note" are used interchangeably in many disability support organisations — but in a well-structured clinical documentation system, they serve different purposes, have different authors, and carry different weight in compliance and legal contexts.
A progress note is a record of what happened during a support session, typically written by the support worker who delivered the session. A good progress note answers four questions: What activities and supports were provided? How did the participant engage with those supports? Were there any notable observations about the participant's wellbeing, behaviour, or health? Are there any follow-up actions or handover items for the next worker?
Progress notes are written at a lay clinical level. In the NDIS context, progress notes also serve as evidence that funded supports were actually delivered — an NDIS audit or NDIA review may look at progress notes to verify that claimed supports correspond to documented service delivery.
A clinical note is a more structured document, typically written by or reviewed by a health practitioner, that records clinical assessment, clinical reasoning, and clinical decisions. Clinical notes address: the participant's current clinical status; what assessment was performed and what it indicated; what clinical intervention was provided or recommended; and what the clinical plan is going forward.
In disability support organisations that employ or engage registered nurses, clinical notes are written for events requiring clinical interpretation: a health deterioration, a medication review, a wound assessment, a behavioural episode requiring clinical analysis.
The most effective documentation systems treat progress notes and clinical notes as complementary layers: progress notes provide the raw observational data — what the support worker saw, heard, and did; clinical notes provide the interpretive layer — what those observations mean clinically, what assessments they prompted, and what changes to the care plan resulted.
Structured note templates solve the quality variability problem by prompting workers through the specific areas they need to document. Instead of a blank text box, workers tick options, select from dropdown lists, and complete required fields — producing a consistent, structured record even from less experienced staff.
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