Gateway Health is committed to upholding the rights of our patients, clients and community members.
The Australian Charter of Healthcare Rights allows clients, consumers, families, carers and service providers to share an understanding of the rights of people receiving healthcare.
This shared understanding helps everyone work together towards a safe and high-quality healthcare system in which rights and responsibilities are understood and accepted.
Listen to your rights and responsibilities in Nepali
Give you choice and access to services that meet your needs where possible.
Tell us if your needs change.
Let us know if you cannot keep an appointment.
Safety and care
Provide services in a safe and caring environment.
Act in a way that helps you and others to be safe.
Be treated with respect
Be polite and respect your views, opinions and personal circumstances such as your culture, family situation, age, gender, disability, faith, sexual orientation, gender identity, or intersex status.
Respect our property and other people using our services.
Access to information
Provide information that meets your needs in a way that you understand.
Give us complete and accurate information.
Decide what happens to you
Include you in decisions about services and treatment options and allow you to bring another person to speak on your behalf. This may be a friend, family member, or trained advocacy worker.
Consider following the treatment plans that are given to you and make the decisions that are right for you.
Confidentiality and privacy
Protect your personal information and only use it for the right reasons.
Value the privacy of others attending programs and services.
Provide feedback
Provide options and opportunities for you to give us feedback.
Give us honest feedback to help us improve our services or to let us know when we do a good job.
Victims’ Charter of Rights
Listen to the victims' charter of rights in Nepali
Listen to the victims' charter of rights in Swahili
Listen to the victims' charter of rights in Italian
Listen to the victims' charter of rights in English
Voluntary assisted dying – On 19 June 2019 the Voluntary Assisted Dying Act 2017 came into effect. Victorians who are at the end of life and who meet strict eligibility criteria can now request access to voluntary assisted dying.