AI phone reception for NDIS providers: what is actually compliant?
Privacy Act 1988, the NDIS Practice Standards, sensitive participant data. What you can automate, where the line sits, and how to set it up so the audit goes smoothly.
Privacy Act 1988, the NDIS Practice Standards, sensitive participant data. What you can automate, where the line sits, and how to set it up so the audit goes smoothly.
The question we get most often from NDIS providers in Australia: "Can I use an AI phone assistant in a practice that handles participant data?" Short answer: yes, if you set it up correctly. Long answer: there are a few specific things that have to be true, and most off-the-shelf AI assistants aren't built with them in mind.
This is a practical guide. Not legal advice - if you're audited, you'll still want to brief your compliance person. But it's enough to know what to ask for and what to refuse.
NDIS practices operate under two stacked privacy regimes:
Sitting on top of both: the Quality and Safeguards Commission, which can and does audit. Your AI phone reception has to survive both audits.
To frame the compliance question, let's be specific about what we're automating. A typical AI reception setup for an allied health practice handles:
It does not do: clinical advice, intake assessment, or anything that requires a registered professional. That line stays.
Three of the Australian Privacy Principles do most of the work for an AI reception setup:
APP 1 - Open and transparent management. Your privacy policy has to mention that calls may be handled by an automated system, what data is captured and where it's stored. We always update the privacy policy when we set this up - it's not optional.
APP 3 - Collection of solicited information. Only collect what you actually need. An AI assistant asking for diagnosis details or NDIS plan numbers at the booking stage is over-collecting. Keep the script to: name, contact, service requested, urgency.
APP 11 - Security. Personal information has to be protected from unauthorised access, modification or disclosure. This is the one that disqualifies most consumer AI assistants - if call audio sits unencrypted on a US-based vendor with no signed data processing agreement, you have an APP 11 problem.
If you're evaluating an AI phone setup:
The Practice Standards are mostly about the experience the participant has, not the underlying tech. The relevant points for AI reception:
Choice and control. Participants must have a way to reach a human. An AI assistant that traps callers in a loop or never escalates is a problem. Always offer "press 0 / say 'speak to someone' to reach the team".
Privacy in service delivery. If a participant identifies that they want privacy or doesn't want recordings, the system needs to respect that. Practically: a flag in the participant record that disables recording for them.
Communication accessibility. Plain English, no clinical jargon, slow enough to follow. The voice should sound like a friendly receptionist, not a corporate phone tree.
Before we go live for an NDIS provider, we work through this checklist with them:
If any of those eight points isn't clearly answered, don't go live yet.
When a Practice Standards auditor asks about your AI phone reception, what they actually want to hear:
That conversation should take ten minutes. If it doesn't, your setup needs work before the next audit window.
AI phone reception is compliant for NDIS providers - when it's set up around the Privacy Act, the APPs and the Practice Standards rather than against them. The common failure isn't the AI; it's a vendor that wasn't built for this sector and a practice that didn't update the privacy policy. Fix those two, and the rest is normal good practice.
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