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05 Nov 2019
Are you in your final year of an approved program of study to become an Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health Practitioner?
Before you can start practising and using the protected title, ‘Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health Practitioner’, you must be registered with the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health Practitioner Board of Australia (the Board).
When you apply for registration, your application is carefully assessed against the Board’s requirements for registration.
For graduate registration as an Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health Practitioner, you need to prove that you meet the following standards:
We also need your graduate results from your education provider.
We cannot register you until we are satisfied that you meet the Board’s standards for registration. These include that you are suitably trained and qualified, and that you are, identify as, and are accepted as an Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander person in the community in which you live or did live.
Once we’ve received your graduate results from your education provider and we are satisfied that you have met all the requirements for registration, we will finalise your application.
When registered, we will publish your name to the national register of health practitioners, and you can start work as an Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health Practitioner!
If you’ve submitted everything you need to prove you’ve met the requirements for registration, we aim to finalise your application within two weeks of receiving your graduate results. We recommend that you submit your application before you graduate so that it’s ready to finalise pending your results.
This year we’ve developed new information material to help you when applying for registration, including advice on how to prove you meet a registration standard as well as tips for avoiding common causes of delay. These are available on the Graduate applications page on the AHPRA website.
To protect against identity theft, the Australian Criminal Intelligence Commission has new requirements for certifying photo ID. On documents with a photograph such as your passport or driver’s licence you must make sure the authorised officer writes or stamps:
‘I certify that this is a true copy of the original and the photograph is a true likeness of the person presenting the document as sighted by me.’
To make sure your documents are certified correctly, please download the guide ‘Certifying Documents: Instructions for applicants and authorised officers’, available on our website. This includes the full list of authorised officers who can certify documents, including teachers, various health practitioners, bank officers and public servants. It’s important that you make sure your documents are certified correctly, as incorrectly certified documents will cause delay.
For registration enquiries or difficulties in accessing the online application form: 1300 419 495 (within Australia)
For media enquiries: (03) 8708 9200