Thursday, June 18, 2026

The “well-oiled machine”: Why siloed governance is your biggest risk

Stop driving blind. Discover why integrated data and “well-oiled” governance are essential to satisfy the Aged Care Quality and Safety Commission, avoid regulatory surprises, and bridge the gap between floor-level incidents and Board-level oversight.

Last updated on 5 May 2026

In the high-stakes environment of Australian aged care, the difference between a compliant provider and one facing regulatory action often comes down to how well their internal ‘cogs’ turn together. Since the introduction of the new regulatory model on 1 November, the Aged Care Quality and Safety Commission (ACQSC) has moved toward a risk-proportionate approach. For leaders, this means that transparency and integrated data are no longer just nice-to-haves: they’re the bedrock of survival.  

The car analogy: Connecting the cogs

In a recent webinar hosted by Mirus Australia, Sherrie Boucher, CEO of Boucher Advisory, likens a healthy governance system to a well-oiled machine. In this analogy, your organisation is the car. You can’t just put petrol in and expect it to run if the internal gears are jammed.  

True clinical governance requires a “beautiful line of evidence” that connects a floor-level incident directly to a Board minute. If an incident occurs, it must trigger a sequence: 

  • Identification: The event is logged in the Incident Management System.  
  • Analysis: Complaints and quality indicators are cross-referenced to find trends.  
  • Escalation: The risk register is updated, and the governing body is alerted.  
  • Action: Continuous improvement (CI) plans are implemented and closed only once the change is embedded in care.  

When these systems are siloed – where the complaints team doesn’t talk to the clinical team, or the Board only sees curated, ‘green’ dashboards – the machine breaks down.

The risk of being blindsided

The Commission now uses “data triangulation” to build risk profiles of providers. They fuse information from Quarterly Financial Reports (QFR), Serious Incident Response Scheme (SIRS) notifications, and care minutes to see a picture that some providers might not even see themselves.  

For instance, data often shows a strong correlation between high agency staff reliance and an increase in complaints four to six weeks later. If your HR data isn’t talking to your complaints register, you’re effectively driving blind. The Commission, however, has the tools to reconstruct these patterns independently.  

Proactive engagement vs. defensive position

Aged care leaders need to shift from being defensive to radical transparency. As Rachael Pandeli, Director of Clinical Governance at Aman Aged Care Services, said in the Mirus webinar, “Mistakes get made[…] admit there is an issue and work in partnership”.  The new model rewards ‘mature governance’, which looks like:  

  1. Self-reporting: Demonstrating you’ve detected, escalated, and managed a risk before the Commission finds it.  
  2. Open disclosure: Being honest with residents and families when things go wrong.  
  3. Evidence-based response: When non-compliance is found, provide a ‘defensible plan’ that identifies the root cause, rather than offering vague promises.  

Driving toward compliance

The Commission’s monitoring is now continuous and ‘risk-proportionate’. Aged care providers who maintain integrated, transparent systems will likely face less monitoring intensity.  

To ensure your organisation is a well-oiled machine, start by asking: “Does our Board see the same picture of risk that the Regulator does?” If the answer is no, it’s time to unblock the cogs of your data.

• aged care compliance • Governance in aged care

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