RACGP Standards 5th Edition Explained for Practice Managers
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TalentMed

Accreditation Explained
RACGP Standards 5th Edition Explained for Practice Managers
The RACGP Standards for general practices (5th edition) are the benchmark for quality and safety in Australian general practice. Practices must meet them to achieve and maintain accreditation, which is a prerequisite for accessing Practice Incentive Program (PIP) payments and other Medicare-linked funding. Practice managers are the people who organise the evidence, brief the team and walk the practice through the assessment. This guide explains the Standards module by module, in plain English, with the practice manager view of what each one actually requires.
The 5th edition was released in October 2017 and remains current at the time of writing. It restructured the previous edition into a modular format so a single set of Standards can be applied across general practice, after-hours and medical deputising services. Always confirm the current edition and any indicator updates directly at racgp.org.au before relying on specific clauses for an accreditation visit. TalentMed Pty Ltd (RTO 22151) delivers HLT57715 Diploma of Practice Management fully online, with content aligned to the way the Standards work in real practice.
What the RACGP Standards are
The Standards for general practices are published by the Royal Australian College of General Practitioners (RACGP) and used as the assessment framework by approved accreditation organisations. They define the minimum quality and safety expectations for practices that want to be accredited under the National General Practice Accreditation Scheme.
The two organisations approved to assess practices against the Standards are AGPAL (Australian General Practice Accreditation Limited) and Quality Practice Accreditation (QPA). Practices choose one. The accreditation cycle runs for three years, after which the practice is reassessed against the current edition. The Standards themselves are owned and maintained by RACGP; the accreditation organisations apply them.
The Standards sit alongside two other quality frameworks in the Australian healthcare system. The National Safety and Quality Health Service (NSQHS) Standards, published by the Australian Commission on Safety and Quality in Health Care (ACSQHC), are mandatory for hospitals and day procedure services. RACGP Standards apply to general practices specifically. Practice managers operating in mixed primary care and day surgery settings need to understand both, but for a general practice the RACGP Standards are the primary reference.
Why accreditation matters for practice managers
Accreditation is the gate to several revenue streams. A practice that lets accreditation lapse loses access to Practice Incentive Program (PIP) payments, the Workforce Incentive Program (WIP) and several other Medicare-linked incentives. For most general practices that exposure runs to tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars a year, depending on size and patient mix.
The practice manager is almost always the person responsible for keeping accreditation on track. The clinical team has the patient relationships and the clinical evidence; the manager has the systems, the documentation and the audit trail. A practice manager who can read the Standards confidently, build evidence as the work happens (rather than scrambling in the month before assessment) and brief the team without panic is the person owners trust to protect the practice’s accreditation status.
Beyond funding, accreditation matters because it sets the floor for safe care. The Standards are an externally validated check that the practice has the basics in place: current clinical training, infection control, patient identification, recall systems, complaint handling, privacy and risk management. Practices that treat accreditation as a tick-box exercise pass narrowly and remain fragile. Practices that treat the Standards as the operating manual run smoother and have better staff confidence.
The 5th edition structure: three modules, 17 Standards
The 5th edition is structured as three modules. The Core module and Quality Improvement module apply across all settings (general practice, after-hours, medical deputising). The third module is setting-specific. For accreditation as a general practice, the third module is the General Practice module.
Each module contains numbered Standards. Each Standard contains Criteria, and each Criterion contains Indicators. Indicators are what the assessor actually looks for evidence against during a visit. The numbering convention is consistent: C1.2 is the second Criterion under the first Standard in the Core module; GP4.2 is the second Criterion under the fourth Standard in the General Practice module.
| Module | Standards | Focus | Practice manager responsibility |
|---|---|---|---|
| Core (C) | C1 to C8 (8 Standards) | Patient safety, governance, records, training | Owns most of the evidence: governance documents, registration verification, records systems, staff training |
| Quality Improvement (QI) | QI1 to QI3 (3 Standards) | Improvement activities, clinical indicators, clinical risk | Leads improvement projects, runs feedback systems, manages incident register |
| General Practice (GP) | GP1 to GP6 (6 Standards) | Continuity of care, infection control, facilities, vaccines | Maintains facilities and equipment, infection control records, doctor’s bag and cold chain compliance |
The next sections walk through what each module covers and what a practice manager should be doing day to day to stay ready.
Core module (C1 to C8): the foundation
CorePatient safety, governance and records
The Core module is the eight Standards every accredited healthcare service must meet, regardless of whether it is a general practice, an after-hours service or a medical deputising service. It covers safe care, patient rights, governance, preventive activities, clinical management, patient identification, health records and non-clinical staff training.
The eight Core Standards are:
Practice manager focus. Most of the Core module evidence is yours to organise. Governance documents (organisation chart, policies, position descriptions), records system audits, registration verification logs for clinicians, and structured training records for reception and administrative staff all sit in the practice manager’s domain. Standard C8 specifically addresses non-clinical staff training, which is why a documented onboarding programme and ongoing CPD log for the front desk team is one of the highest-value pieces of evidence a manager can build.
The skills you draw on most heavily here are records governance, healthcare HR and clear documentation. For a deeper view of those skills as part of the wider role, see 10 skills every Australian practice manager needs.
Quality Improvement module (QI1 to QI3): improvement, indicators and risk
QIContinuous improvement and risk discipline
The Quality Improvement module is three Standards covering quality improvement activities, clinical indicators and clinical risk management. It is the module that demands the practice has a continuous improvement habit, not just an episodic clean-up before each accreditation visit.
The three QI Standards are:
Practice manager focus. Criterion QI1.1 requires the practice to have at least one team member with primary responsibility for leading quality improvement systems. In most practices that person is the practice manager. You are expected to be able to describe the improvement projects the practice has worked on over the past three years, share information about QI and patient safety internally, and seek feedback from the team about how the QI systems are working.
Patient feedback (QI1.2) is a Standard in its own right. The practice must show that it actively collects feedback, considers it and demonstrates that the feedback has influenced what the practice does. A patient feedback survey filed in a drawer is not evidence; a patient feedback survey with documented changes that flowed from it is.
QI3 turns the discipline towards risk. The practice needs an incident register, evidence that near misses are being recorded as well as adverse events, evidence of regular review and evidence that improvements have followed. Open disclosure (QI3.2) requires that when something goes wrong with a patient’s care, the practice tells the patient honestly and supports them. The manager is usually the person who maintains the register and prompts the clinical team to review it.
General Practice module (GP1 to GP6): the setting-specific layer
GPContinuity, infection control, facilities, vaccines
The General Practice module is the setting-specific overlay applied to general practices being accredited. It covers six Standards: continuity and access, comprehensive care, education and training of practitioners, infection prevention, facilities and equipment, and vaccine management.
The six GP Standards (summarised) are:
Practice manager focus. GP3 (qualifications, education and training of healthcare practitioners) is one of the most evidence-heavy criteria for the manager. You need a current register that shows every clinician’s AHPRA registration status, professional indemnity, CPD log and any recency-of-practice evidence required. A registration lapse picked up by an assessor is one of the easiest preventable findings.
GP4 infection prevention and control is a hard floor: sterilisation processes, instrument tracking, hand hygiene audits and personal protective equipment. The clinical team owns the practice; the manager owns the documentation and the audit trail.
GP5 facilities and equipment requires evidence that equipment is calibrated and maintained on a schedule, that the doctor’s bag contents are checked and in date, and that the physical practice meets accessibility expectations. GP6 vaccine management means a documented cold chain monitoring system, with twice-daily fridge temperature logs, action protocols for breaches and evidence the vaccine fridge has been maintained correctly. This single criterion has cost more practices an unnecessary finding than almost any other; treat it as non-negotiable.
The accreditation cycle: how the three years actually work
Practices are accredited for three years at a time. The temptation is to treat year one as the relaxed year, year two as quiet preparation and year three as the panic year. The practices that get the cleanest results treat the cycle as continuous.
| Cycle year | What good practice managers do | What weak practices do |
|---|---|---|
| Year 1 (post-accreditation) | Address every condition or recommendation from the previous visit. Set up a quarterly evidence-collection rhythm. | File the report and forget about it. |
| Year 2 | Run two or three QI projects. Refresh policies that are due for review. Audit GP3 registration records and GP6 cold chain. | Notice the deadline approaching. Worry quietly. |
| Year 3 (pre-assessment) | Self-audit against current Standards using the assessment organisation’s resources. Brief the team. Confirm the assessment date. | Spend two months reconstructing evidence under stress. |
A practice manager who treats the Standards as the operating manual rather than an audit script naturally produces evidence as the work happens. The HLT57715 Diploma frames it that way too: accreditation readiness is a by-product of running a properly governed practice, not a separate workstream.
Common reasons practices fail or struggle at accreditation
Most practices that struggle at accreditation are not running unsafe care. They have gaps in evidence, inconsistent record-keeping or one or two specific blind spots that were preventable. Knowing the common failure patterns lets a new practice manager prioritise.
None of these are unfixable, and none require new clinical capability. They require a practice manager who treats evidence as a system rather than a project. That is the central skill the Standards are quietly testing.
Where the HLT57715 Diploma fits
The HLT57715 Diploma of Practice Management is structured around how Australian practices actually run, which means the curriculum maps directly onto the kind of evidence the RACGP Standards expect. Modules cover practice governance, quality systems, healthcare HR, privacy and records, infection control awareness, financial management and continuous improvement.
The Diploma will not turn a new practice manager into an experienced one overnight, but it gives you the framework to read the Standards confidently, run a registration audit, set up an incident register and lead a practice through its first accreditation visit. From there the depth comes from doing the work.
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Frequently asked questions
TalentMed Pty Ltd, RTO 22151. HLT57715 Diploma of Practice Management is delivered fully online. VSL approval, current fees and intake details are confirmed on the course page and at training.gov.au. The RACGP Standards for general practices (5th edition) and current indicators are published at racgp.org.au; this article summarises structure for educational purposes and is not a substitute for the Standards themselves.

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