Term
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Definition
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Blue Card
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A Blue Card is a plasticised card, issued to a person who is the holder of a current positive notice by Blue Card Service in the Department of Justice and Attorney and is valid for three years from the date of issue. A Blue Card displays the following information about the Blue Card holder:
- the name of the person
- the registration number of the person
- the expiry date of the person’s positive notice
- the signature of the person.
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Child
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A person under the age of 18 years.
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Employee contact person
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The Department employee who is available for the employee(s) conducting home visit to contact as part of the established communication plan. The contact person must be informed of the elements of the communication plan including:
- expected contact times
- contact methods (text/phone)
- strategy to implement should contact not be made at expected times
- emergency protocols.
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Control measure
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Actions implemented to eliminate or minimise a risk as far as is reasonably practicable. Control measures should be regularly reviewed to ensure their effectiveness.
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Exemption Card
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An Exemption Card is a plasticised card, issued to a registered teacher, Police Officer or Registered Health Practitioner allowing them to undertake child-related services that are not part of their normal employment, such as private tutoring of a child, work in a child care centre, volunteering at a children’s sporting club, participating in a homestay or reading program or supervising after hours school care.
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Extreme risk activity
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An activity that is inherently dangerous. There is a high chance of a serious incident occurring that would result in a highly debilitating injury.
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Hazard
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An object or situation that has the potential to harm a person, the environment or cause damage to property. Hazards in relation to home visits include, but are not limited to, harm, injury, disease, illness, loss or damage.
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Hierarchy of control
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The hierarchy of control is a risk management process in which the ways of controlling risks are ranked from the highest level of protection and reliability to the lowest.
The hierarchy of control is as follows (from highest level of protection to the lowest):
- eliminate the risk
- substitute the hazard
- isolate the hazard
- re-design controls
- apply administrative controls
- use personal protective equipment (PPE).
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High risk activity
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An activity where there is a likely chance of a significant incident resulting in injury or illness requiring medical treatment.
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Home visit
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A home visit includes the attendance of a department employee at the home of a student, their parent, an employee or another member of the school/local community
Home visits by Department employees may be due to regulatory and non-regulatory requirements. Limited examples include:
Regulatory:
- required under the Education Services for Overseas Students Act 2000 for international student placement (ISP)
- required under the Education and Care Services National Law (Queensland) Act 2011
Non-regulatory:
- Study Tours and Global programs where a duty of care is present
- Visits to discuss student issues
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Home visit risk management plan
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The Home visit risk management plan demonstrates and documents the risk management approach undertaken for home visits.
A Home visit risk management plan may be conducted for multiple home visits e.g. demonstrating how home visits for regulatory purposes will be conducted by a whole work group
OR
A home visit risk management plan may be undertaken for an individual home visit to a student home.
A template is provided which can be modified by the work group.
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Low risk activity
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An activity that has little chance of an incident occurring which would result in harm, injury, disease, illness or damage.
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Medium risk activity
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An activity that has some chance of an incident occurring which would result in an injury requiring first aid.
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Reasonably practicable
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The things that could be done at a particular time to ensure that HSW risk is reduced to an acceptable level.
Deciding what is ‘reasonably practicable’ to protect people from harm requires consideration and assessment of all relevant matters, including:
- the likelihood of the hazard or risk concerned occurring
- the degree of harm that might result from the hazard or risk
- knowledge about the hazard or risk, and ways of eliminating or minimising the risk
- the availability and suitability of ways to eliminate or minimise the risk, and
- the anticipated financial or other costs to reduce the risk and whether this is proportionate to the benefit to be attained.
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Risk
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The possibility that harm (death, injury or illness) might occur when exposed to a hazard.
For example, the hazard is an uneven pathway. The risk is the likelihood that a person will slip/trip/fall because the uneven pathway forms a trip hazard.
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Risk assessment
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Risk assessment is a term used to describe the overall process or method to:
- identify hazards and risk factors that have the potential to cause harm (hazard identification)
- analyse and evaluate the risk associated with that hazard (risk analysis, and risk evaluation)
- determine appropriate ways to eliminate the hazard, or control the risk when the hazard cannot be eliminated (risk control).
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Risk management
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A systematic approach used to ensure workplace health, safety and wellbeing. It is a structured decision making process using four steps:
- identification of hazards
- assessment of risks
- implementation of controls
- monitoring and review of controls.
The objective is to eliminate or minimise the risk of harm which people may be exposed to at a workplace or from work activities.
This can be documented using the Home visit risk management plans. Approval is always required prior to the activity being undertaken.
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Student
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A student is any person, regardless of age, who attends a state educational institution, established under ss. 13, 14 or 15 of the
Education (General Provisions) Act 2006 (Qld)
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Training
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Training may be required to support employees to safely undertake a home visit. Training should be determined by considering the risks identified and the skills/experience of the employee. Appropriate training may include internally or externally provided training.
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