Date and time

May 18 from 1pm to 3:30pm AEST

Location

Online event

Refund Policy

No Refunds

About this event

Know how to approach those difficult topics

Under the Support at Home program, communication is no longer just a “soft skill”; it is a core component of safe, accountable, and evidence-based care delivery.

Care Partners are increasingly required to have conversations that involve:

  • Changes to services or care plans
  • Funding, pricing and consumer contributions
  • Declining health, risk, or safety concerns
  • Capacity, choice, and dignity of risk
  • Family expectations versus assessed need
  • Service boundaries and provider responsibilities

These conversations can feel challenging for both the worker and the participant but avoiding them can lead to:

  • Misalignment between assessed needs and services delivered
  • Poor clinical and psychosocial outcomes
  • Reduced adherence to care plans
  • Increased risk, complaints, or escalation
  • Consumer confusion, distress, or loss of trust
  • Lack of defensible documentation to support decision-making and claiming

In a strengthened regulatory environment, providers must demonstrate that participants are informed, involved, and supported to make decisions even when those conversations are difficult.

🔥 Overview

What are ‘difficult’ conversations in home care?

These are conversations where:

  • The topic is sensitive, emotional, or complex
  • The consumer or family may feel distressed, resistant, or uncertain
  • There may be competing expectations or misunderstandings
  • The outcome may involve change, limitation, or risk

Even highly experienced professionals can find these conversations difficult.

Why?

Because they require you to balance:

  • Clinical judgement and evidence
  • Participant choice and autonomy
  • Emotional intelligence and empathy
  • Clear, accurate communication
  • Regulatory and organisational requirements

Without the right approach, conversations can become:

  • Avoided or delayed
  • Overly clinical or transactional
  • Emotionally reactive
  • Poorly documented or not followed through

Under Support at Home, this is critical because every interaction contributes to the evidence of quality care.

This training workshopprovides practical, real-world strategies to help Care Partners move beyond avoidance and into confident, professional communication.

🚩 Learning Outcomes

Attendees will learn how to:

  • Recognise and describe emotional responses experienced by both participants and the workforce during difficult conversations, and understand their impact on communication, decision-making, and outcomes
  • Identify when a conversation is ‘difficult’ and articulate the risks of avoidance within a Support at Home environment, including impacts on care quality, safety, and compliance
  • Define and apply a structured 10-step approach to planning and delivering difficult conversations that are clear, respectful, and outcome-focused
  • Apply best-practice guidelines for delivering ‘bad news, ensuring conversations are handled with sensitivity, clarity, and professionalism
  • Use a strengths-based approach to opening conversations, supporting engagement, trust, and consumer participation from the outset
  • Structure conversations to empower consumers, promoting informed choice, shared decision-making, and alignment with assessed needs and care plans
  • Navigate sensitive topics effectively, including funding, service limitations, risk, and changes to care, in a way that is transparent and defensible
  • Manage and respond to emotional and negative reactions, including resistance, distress, or conflict, while maintaining empathy and professional boundaries
  • Apply practical strategies to de-escalate challenging situations, maintaining focus on safety, dignity, and positive outcomes
  • Transform difficult conversations into constructive outcomes, strengthening relationships, improving consumer understanding, and supporting continuity of care
  • Document conversations clearly and accurately, ensuring records support compliance, claiming, and audit requirements under Support at Home

💡 Who will benefit most from this workshop?

Care Partners, Clinicians who are supervising care staff, and non-clinicians who want to learn more about communicating with clients.

📅 Date: 18 May 2026

  • 1.00 pm – 3.30 pm – New South Wales, Victoria, Tasmania, and the Australian Capital Territory
  • 12noon – 2.30 pm Queensland
  • 12.30 pm -3.00 pm – South Australia
  • 11.30 am -2.00 pm – Northern Territory
  • 10.00 am – 01.00 pm – Western Australia

🎖️ Recognition

All attendees will receive a Statement of Attendance upon completion of an assessment as evidence of Continuing Professional Development hours.

💼 Inclusions

  • Online Workbook questions (and the opportunity to gain feedback from the LPA team)
  • Downloadable tools and resources

💻 Learner requirements

  • Computer or mobile device
  • A stable internet connection (broadband/4G+ recommended)
  • Speakers and a microphone are optional

Regarding online training, we know that staring into the “virtual classroom” can sometimes miss those moments that face-to-face events deliver. So, we are mixing things up. In a time of transformation in the sector, we want to ensure that you are supported now more than ever. We will focus even more on interactive, immersive training sessions (think break-out rooms, cameras on (yes, scary), opportunities to network, and maintaining the LPA way of tangible tools and resources).

💰 Investment: $ 437 inc. GST

$437 inc. GST

$437 inc. GST