Aged Care Blog

the 5 most common workforce compliance gaps in aged care

The 5 most common workforce compliance gaps in aged care

Published: December 2025

In the aged care sector, workforce compliance is more than a box-ticking exercise; it’s directly tied to resident safety, quality of care and your organisation’s ability to meet regulatory standards. As the sector continues to face workforce shortages, increased demand and ongoing legislative change, maintaining a compliant workforce has become both more critical and more challenging. 

Below are the five most common workforce compliance gaps we see across the aged care industry, along with practical solutions to strengthen your organisation’s compliance framework.

1. Outdated or missing credentials

One of the biggest compliance challenges is ensuring every staff member holds current and complete documentation.  

Common gaps include: 

  • Expired police checks
  • Missing NDIS worker screening checks
  • First aid or CPR certificates overdue for renewal
  • Missing immunisation or COVID vaccination history
  • Incomplete qualification transcripts or certificates
  • Incorrect name matching across documentation

These gaps often happen because most compliance systems rely heavily on manual administrative oversight. When documents are tracked via spreadsheets, inboxes or physical folders, it’s easy for expiry dates to slip through the cracks. 

These issues can expose providers to significant regulatory risk, particularly if a non-compliant worker is found to be providing direct care.

How to fix it:

  • Implement software such as Zipline that is built for the aged care and healthcare industries, which allows you to store all documentation in one central location
  • Enable automatic reminders to staff before documents expire
  • Assign compliance responsibility to a dedicated person or team
  • Conduct periodic internal audits to identify gaps early

By introducing automation, you can shift from reactive problem‑solving to proactive compliance management, with more reliable and efficient processes.

2. Inconsistent onboarding and induction processes

In aged care, onboarding can look very different from facility to facility, or even manager to manager. When teams are busy filling roster gaps, onboarding steps are often skipped or rushed, leading to compliance blind spots. 

Examples of inconsistent onboarding include:

  • Staff starting shifts before completing mandatory training
  • Shadow shifts varying widely between locations
  • No standardised orientation for dementia-specific or high-care environments
  • Poor visibility of whether new hires understand workplace policies
  • Paper-based onboarding packs getting lost or being incomplete

These inconsistencies put both staff and residents at risk as workers begin their roles without the skills or knowledge they need. 

Instead, onboarding workflows should be standardised with clear checklists, verification steps and automated compliance gates that prevent staff from starting until all requirements are met.

3. Gaps in mandatory training compliance

Mandatory training is non-negotiable in aged care, covering critical topics such as:

  • Manual handling
  • Infection prevention and control
  • Medication administration
  • Dementia and behaviours of concern
  • Fire and emergency procedures
  • Elder abuse and mandatory reporting
  • Cultural awareness

Yet training compliance is one of the most common areas where providers fall behind. 

Strategies to improve your training compliance include:

  • Centralising training records in a single platform
  • Automating reminders for upcoming renewals
  • Running monthly compliance reports to catch missed modules
  • Enforcing training completion before shift allocation
  • Aligning training frameworks with regulatory standards

Improving visibility over training ensures residents receive care from staff who are both confident and capable.

4. Poor visibility across aged care casual and agency workforces

With ongoing staffing shortages, aged care relies heavily on casual and temporary workers. While essential, these workforces bring unique compliance challenges. 

Risks include:

  • Workers operating across multiple providers with inconsistent checks
  • Agencies sending staff without full credential verification
  • Manual back-and-forth between providers and agencies before each shift
  • No clear “ready to work” status
  • Limited alignment between internal and agency compliance requirements

The more external staff you rely on, the higher your compliance burden becomes. Here’s how to regain control:

  • Partner only with agencies like Sanctuary that maintain rigorous compliance standards
  • Adopt shared compliance platforms that allow providers and agencies to view the same information
  • Set clear expectations around documentation and renewal timelines
  • Request real-time compliance updates before confirming a shift

When both internal and external staff meet the same standards, risks are dramatically reduced.

5. Manual processes that slow down compliance checks

Perhaps the biggest underlying issue across aged care is the reliance on outdated, manual systems. These processes are slow, error-prone and demand significant administrative effort. 

Examples of manual processes that cause regular issues include:

  • Tracking staff credentials in spreadsheets
  • Emailing documents back and forth
  • Manually checking expiry dates
  • No automated alerts for missing compliance requirements
  • Paper-based onboarding packs that require manual data entry

These manual systems can also break down as soon as workload increases or staffing pressure intensifies. 

Here’s how moving from manual processes to automation can transform your compliance:

  • Digital forms eliminate paperwork and reduce human error
  • Real-time dashboards show workforce readiness at a glance
  • Automated reminders ensure staff stay up to date
  • Compliance gates prevent rostering of non-compliant workers
  • Managers gain complete workforce visibility across all sites

Automation doesn’t replace peopleit frees them to focus on quality care rather than admin.

Discover more about the benefits of using Zipline in the video below.

Creating a safer, more compliant aged care workforce

Aged care providers face increasing pressure to maintain a fully compliant workforce. By identifying and addressing the five common compliance gaps, you can improve resident safety, reduce risk and strengthen your operational resilience.

If you’re looking to streamline your processes or explore automated compliance technology such as Zipline, our team at Sanctuary can guide you through best-practice workforce compliance tailored to aged care settings. Get in touch today for more information.

Register with us

Looking for a new opportunity
in the aged care sector?

Expert staffing solutions

Need staffing support on a temporary, contract or permanent basis?

Subscribe Here!

Subscribe to our blog!
Aged care blog
FIFO Nurse Salary Guide

FIFO nursing is a great opportunity to expand your experience and develop your skillset in rural and remote regions, delivering aged care services to communities living far from major population centres. It is not only a fantastic way to explore areas of Australia, but you can also earn an increased FIFO nurse salary to compensate…

Your guide to getting involved in aged care volunteering

First published: May 2025 Aged care volunteering is an opportunity to give back to the community whilst providing companionship and support to older people whilst both living in aged care homes or receiving home care. Aged care volunteering options that are available include assisting with daily living activities to make day to day tasks easier,…

Care minutes in residential aged care

First published: November 2024 As part of the aged care reform roadmap, the Department of Health and Aged Care are making changes to the number of direct care minutes a resident in residential aged care receives each day from a clinical aged care worker. As of 2023, it sat at 200 minutes per day with…

Enhancing aged care: Pulse Staffing Australia and Sanctuary Recruitment to deliver PALM Aged Care Expansion Program

First published: July 2024 Quality aged care is vital for ensuring that elderly people live fulfilling, healthy lives with dignity and respect. Aligned with our purpose to improve people’s lives, Pulse Staffing Australia and Sanctuary Recruitment, both part of Acacium Group, have partnered to support the delivery of the 2024 PALM Aged Care Expansion Program….

Meet our Sanctuary Recruitment nursing team

First published: September 2024 Getting to know our nurses on a personal as well as clinical background is important to us. When you join the Sanctuary team, the sense of community that you get through building relationships with other nurses and your consultant provides a foundation of support and opportunity. Kingsley, a AIN based in…

6 steps to aged care compliance readiness

As Australia’s aged care landscape continues to evolve, compliance has never been more important. With the strengthened Aged Care Quality Standards and the new Aged Care Act that came into effect on the 1 November 2025, providers must be confident that their workforce, systems and processes are up to standard. These obligations apply across residential…

Touchdown for our PALM Scheme class of 2024!

First published: March 2025 On Tuesday 4th March our PALM Scheme Class of 2024 arrived in Melbourne, Victoria, marking the start of their four year journey in Australia, making a difference in residential aged care homes in Mildura and Port Macquarie for Regis Aged Care. Under the Pacific Australia Labour Mobility (PALM) Scheme, 40 participants…

How our remote area nurses help aged care providers thrive in hard-to-staff regions

Regional and remote aged care homes are facing significant staffing shortages. The Nursing Supply and Demand 2023-2035 report predicts that this will increasingly impact service delivery across these areas over the next 12 years as unmet demand continues to rise.  The sustainability of the aged care workforce depends on providers implementing long-term strategies that attract…

Why Sanctuary is one of Australia’s best nursing agencies

Over the past decade, Sanctuary has built longstanding relationships with aged care professionals and service providers, establishing ourselves as one of the best nursing agencies in Australia. With a focus on aged care nursing and leadership roles, we connect experienced candidates with reputable not-for-profit and private aged care organisations across the country. At Sanctuary, people…

How to become an aged care worker

First published: November 2023, revised April 2024 The aged care industry encompasses the services provided and delivered to care for the elderly population. The Department of Health and Aged Care governs the quality of these services and focuses on continuous improvement and development, with the Aged Care Quality and Safety Commission in charge of government…