Risk Management in Outdoor Health Practice

 

Risk Management in Outdoor Health Practice

This information is provided as general guidance only and does not constitute professional, legal, insurance, or risk management advice. Requirements are highly context-specific. You are responsible for ensuring compliance with applicable laws, obtaining appropriate insurance, maintaining current qualifications, and seeking independent professional advice for your specific circumstances.

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Outdoor health practice brings together therapeutic practices and natural environments with care, intention, and professional responsibility.

Risk management is part of the process that makes this possible. 

What is Risk Management?

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Risk management is the ongoing process of identifying, understanding, and responding to potential risks across all aspects of practice—from physical safety to psychological wellbeing, cultural respect to environmental care. It’s about creating the conditions where therapeutic outdoor experiences can happen with appropriate care and professional accountability.

In outdoor health, risk management isn’t just about avoiding harm. It’s about understanding what could go wrong across multiple domains, implementing thoughtful safeguards, and responding dynamically as conditions change. It’s what enables practitioners to work confidently in complex environments where therapeutic relationships meet the natural world.

This page connects practitioners to established Australian standards and frameworks, and shows how OHA’s Quality Framework helps integrate risk management thinking across outdoor and health practice.

Risk Management as Core Practice

Whether your primary training is in health, therapy, education, or outdoor activities, risk management must be integrated into all aspects of outdoor health practice—from initial planning through to delivery and review.

Dynamic risk assessment – The Australian Adventure Activity Standard describes this as “dynamic risk assessment”—the ongoing process of maintaining situational awareness, identifying changing hazards, and responding appropriately as conditions evolve during activities.

Effective risk management is:

  • An ethical responsibility
  • Integrated into planning, decision-making, and delivery
  • Responsive to changing conditions and circumstances
  • Continuous rather than completed once
  • Applied across all risk domains simultaneously
  • A core professional competency, rather than an administrative burden

Types of Risk

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Outdoor health practitioners navigate risks across multiple domains, for example:

Risks to People

Physical & Environmental
Weather, terrain, wildlife, medical emergencies, equipment safety, transport, activity-specific hazards

Therapeutic & Psychological
Confidentiality in public spaces, therapeutic boundaries in outdoor settings, trauma-informed practice, emotional intensity, managing crises in remote locations, working with vulnerable people

Cultural & Ethical
Cultural safety, relationship with Country and Traditional Owners, Indigenous protocols, preventing cultural and spiritual harm, power dynamics

Risks to your Organisation/Business

Operational
Insurance adequacy, emergency procedures, policies and systems, documentation, equipment maintenance, staff training

Financial
Liability exposure, insurance claims, legal costs, loss of contracts, business continuity

Compliance
Work health and safety requirements, professional registration standards, employment arrangements, contractual obligations, land access permissions and licencing

Risks to the Environment

Ecological Impact
Land degradation, vegetation damage, wildlife disturbance, water quality, cumulative impacts of repeated use

Sustainability
Long-term viability of sites, relationship with landowners/managers, adherence to Leave No Trace principles, caring for Country

Risks to Professional Practice

Individual
Scope of practice boundaries, dual competencies (therapeutic + outdoor), professional registration requirements, supervision, continuing professional development

Systemic (e.g., meeting funding system requirements)
Quality monitoring, incident reporting and learning, evidence-informed practice, professional accountability, billing.

To You
Professional standing, referral relationships, registration status, employment prospects

To Your Organization
Public trust, funder confidence, insurance premiums, contract renewals, media attention

To the Sector
To the broader perception of outdoor health practice, regulatory scrutiny, insurance availability and cost, professional recognition, funding opportunities

Land Access Requirements

Land managers (national parks, state forests, local councils, private landowners) may require permits, licenses, or commercial operator agreements to conduct outdoor health services on their land. Requirements vary by jurisdiction and land type and typically include specific qualifications, insurance levels, risk management documentation, and adherence to land management guidelines.

Note: Incidents affecting one practitioner or organisation can impact the entire outdoor health sector’s reputation, access to insurance, and regulatory environment. This makes risk management a collective responsibility.

Prioritising and Responding to Risks

To assist in prioritising and mitigating risks, a risk matrix is used to categorise and score both ‘Likelihood’ (e.g. Almost certain, Likely, Moderate, Unlikely, Rare) and ‘Consequence (Insignificant, Minor, Moderate, Major, Catastrophic) of the risks. This usually occurs before and after mitigations are identified. 


What Makes Outdoor Health Different

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While outdoor activity standards, WHS frameworks, and health sector guidelines provide excellent foundations, outdoor health practice requires integration of therapeutic ethics with outdoor practice standards across all risk domains.

  • How do therapeutic boundaries function when walking side-by-side?
  • What does informed consent look like when working in unpredictable environments?
  • How do we balance individual autonomy with group safety needs?
  • When are we working within vs. beyond our scope of practice?
  • How do we maintain confidentiality in public outdoor spaces?
  • What are our responsibilities to Country and Traditional Owners?
  • How do we care for environments we use therapeutically?

These questions require integrated thinking across therapeutic, outdoor, cultural, and environmental domains.

OHA’s Quality Framework

Explore the OHA Quality Framework

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For comprehensive links to Australian standards, professional associations, WHS regulators, and outdoor sector organizations, visit our Resources for Outdoor Health Practice page.

Links to Resource for Outdoor Health Practice

Your Next Steps

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Explore OHA Resources

Join OHA

Become a member to connect with peers, access member events and support the development of quality resources for outdoor health practice.

Learn more about OHA membership

Stay connected

Subscribe to our newsletter or follow us on social media (links in footer) for updates and sector news


Need Support?

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Questions about standards or scope of practice?
Consult AHPRA, your professional association, or review the OHA Quality Framework. Seek professional supervision for practice-specific guidance.

Concerns about your practice?
Seek supervision immediately and consult your professional association.

Building risk management skills?
Explore training through WHS regulators, outdoor organisations, and OHA professional development.


Your feedback on these resources is welcome! please email us at [email protected]

Last updated: 20 October 2025