18/06/2026
π¬ A clientβs daughter asks: βSo whatβs this one actually for?β
πΆ And for a second, you are not sure.
You smile, you manage it, but you go home thinking: I should know this.
Here is the truth: you are not underqualified. You have just never been given the training.
That changes the moment you do the course. You answer with confidence, because you actually understand what you are handing over.
π² You deserve to feel sure. Enrol in the HLTHPS006 Assist with Medication course today.
16/06/2026
π‘οΈ A medication is only as safe as the way it is stored.
Quick checks that matter:
β
Right temperature (some must be refrigerated).
β
Original, clearly labelled packaging.
β
Within the expiry date.
β
Not part of a current recall.
A tablet kept in a hot car or used past its expiry may not work the way it should, and that is a real risk to your client.
π² The course shows you what to check and why. Enrol online today.
12/06/2026
β° Not all medications are flexible.
For some, timing is part of the dose:
π§ Parkinsonβs medication only controls symptoms if it is on time.
π½οΈ Some diabetes medications must line up with meals.
β€οΈ A late or missed dose can change how a client feels within the hour.
Recognising a time-critical medication, and knowing why it matters, is core knowledge for safe medication assistance.
π² Learn it properly, online and self-paced. Enrol today.
10/06/2026
π A client has every right to refuse their medication.
Here is what good practice looks like:
π Stay calm and respectful. Never force it or hide it in food.
π Record the refusal clearly.
π Report it to the right person.
β° Know whether the dose can be safely offered again later.
Knowing exactly what to do in this moment is what separates confident carers from anxious ones.
π² The HLTHPS006 Assist with Medication course covers it step by step. Enrol today.
08/06/2026
π PRN medication means βpro re nataβ, or βas neededβ.
β
It is not on a fixed schedule like a morning tablet.
β
It is given in response to something: pain, agitation, nausea.
π€ So who decides when it is needed? And how do you record why you gave it?
This is exactly the kind of real-world judgment the HLTHPS006 Assist with Medication course walks you through, in plain English, around your shifts.
π² Enrol online today and study tonight.
06/06/2026
Let's be honest about what waiting actually costs you. π
Every month you put off enrolling in the Assist with Medication course is a month you spend:
πΈ Locked out of the medication shifts that pay better
πΈ Watching less experienced colleagues get the rosters you deserve
πΈ Carrying that quiet, unresolved anxiety about whether what you're doing is even legal
πΈ Telling yourself 'I'll start next month' (again)
Versus a few weeks of part-time study, around your shifts, on your phone.
β¨ The credential is permanent. The decision is one click.
Enrol this week. Walk into next month already qualified.
Link in bio. π
02/06/2026
End of financial year is closer than you think. π§Ύ
If you pay for your own HLTHPS006 Assist with Medication course, the cost is generally tax deductible (when the training is directly related to your current role).
πΈ You invest in the credential
πΈ You claim the cost on your return
πΈ You walk away with a nationally recognised qualification AND a tidier tax outcome
(Quick disclaimer: we're not accountants. Always check with yours. But it's worth a quick conversation before June 30.)
If you've been waiting for the 'right' moment to enrol, it's now.
Get the credential. Claim it back. Go into the new financial year with a stronger career.
Link in bio. π
29/05/2026
If you completed your medication training more than 12 months ago, this is for you. β°
The NDIS Commission recommends annual refresher training for any worker who assists with medications.
Why?
π Best practice changes (storage rules, documentation standards, common adverse drug interactions)
π Memory fades, even for the most experienced carers
π Auditors and employers are increasingly asking for current evidence of training
A refresher is not about doubting your skills. It's about staying current.
Our HLTHPS006 Assist with Medication course works as both a first-time qualification and a refresher unit, delivered fully online and self-paced.
When was your last one? Drop the year in the comments. π
27/05/2026
Imagine writing this note to yourself, six weeks from today. π
Dear me,
You finally enrolled. You were tired and you weren't sure you had the time. You started anyway.
You studied for 20 minutes here, half an hour there. Some nights on the couch. One module on the bus.
You passed. You got the email. You almost cried at your kitchen bench.
The next medication round felt different. You actually felt qualified to be there.
Your supervisor noticed. Your clients noticed. You noticed.
And you wished you'd done it sooner.
β¨ The version of you in six weeks is closer than you think.
Enrol today. Future you is waiting. π
25/05/2026
She held my hand a little tighter than usual. π«Ά
Then she said, 'You're so good at this. Thank you for being careful.'
And I had to look out the window because I didn't want her to see me get teary.
If you've had a moment like that, you know what your work is really about.
It's not the timesheets.
It's not the rosters.
It's the trust.
π Your clients trust you with their bodies, their routines, and their dignity.
π Honouring that trust looks like showing up trained, current, and sure of what you're doing.
π The HLTHPS006 Assist with Medication credential is one of the clearest ways to do that.
Tell us about a client who changed how you saw your work. We'd love to read your story. π