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Progress Notes vs Clinical Notes: Understanding the Difference in NDIS Services

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.

What Is a Progress Note?

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.

What Is a Clinical Note?

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.

How the Two Document Types Work Together

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 Templates: Bridging the Gap

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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