What Is a Patient Advocate?

A patient advocate helps you prepare for appointments, organise your health records, and navigate a system that can feel impossible to manage alone — especially when you have a complex or chronic condition.

✎  Antonella Soarez Dornelles 📅  Updated June 2026 📖  10-minute read

What is a patient advocate?

A patient advocate is a person who supports patients in navigating the health system. They help organise medical records, prepare appointment documents, explain health information in plain language, and ensure that a patient's concerns are communicated clearly to their treating team.

Patient advocates are not doctors and do not diagnose conditions or prescribe treatment. Their role sits entirely outside clinical practice. They act as a bridge between you and your clinical team — helping you arrive at appointments prepared, informed, and heard.

In Australia, patient advocacy is a health education and navigation service. It is distinct from registered medical practice and from the formal hospital-based patient liaison roles offered by some public health services.

Important: CareBridge is a health education and navigation service. The Health Navigator holds an international medical degree but is NOT registered with AHPRA or the Medical Board of Australia. This service does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment recommendation. All clinical decisions remain with your treating registered health practitioner.

What does a patient advocate do?

The day-to-day work of a patient advocate varies depending on the client's needs. At CareBridge, services fall into six broad categories:

Do I need a patient advocate?

You do not need a patient advocate for routine care. Most GP visits and straightforward specialist appointments do not require one. However, a patient advocate can make a significant difference in specific situations:

A good patient advocate will tell you honestly if your situation does not require their involvement. The free 15-minute intro call at CareBridge exists for exactly this reason.

What is the difference between a patient advocate and a doctor?

The distinction is clear and important.

A doctor — whether a general practitioner or a specialist — is a registered health practitioner authorised by AHPRA and the relevant specialist college. They diagnose conditions, prescribe medications, order investigations, and take legal and professional responsibility for clinical decisions. You can only access many services in the Australian health system through a registered treating clinician.

A patient advocate has no clinical authority. They make no diagnostic or treatment decisions. They cannot refer you to a specialist, prescribe anything, or override any clinical recommendation. What they can do is make sure that when you sit across from your doctor, you are presenting your health story as clearly and completely as possible — and that you leave that appointment with a clear understanding of what was said and what happens next.

CareBridge's Health Navigator, Antonella Soarez Dornelles, holds a medical degree from Fundación H.A. Barceló (Argentina) and has clinical research experience at the Dobney Hypertension Centre, UWA / Royal Perth Hospital. She is not registered with AHPRA and does not practise medicine in Australia. Her medical background informs the quality of the documents and evidence summaries she produces — it does not make CareBridge a clinical service.

How much does a patient advocate cost in Australia?

Costs vary considerably across Australia depending on the provider and the scope of work. Some advocates charge by the hour; others (like CareBridge) use a fixed-fee model so there are no surprises.

CareBridge's current published pricing:

Service Price What's included Turnaround
GP Consult Ready $190 Focused appointment preparation document 3–5 business days
Health Evidence Summary $390 Comprehensive history & evidence document for specialist referrals or complex case reviews 5–7 business days
Complex Case Navigation $690 Full case review, evidence summary, and coordination support 7–10 business days
Add-ons & sessions From $60 Supplements to any report — see Services page Varies

Patient advocacy is not currently covered by Medicare or private health insurance in Australia. A complimentary post-appointment follow-up is included with every CareBridge report.

Can a patient advocate help with a specialist referral?

A patient advocate cannot issue a referral. Only a registered GP or specialist can write a referral in the Australian health system.

What a patient advocate can do is make your referral significantly more effective. Many referrals are rejected, redirected, or deprioritised because the referring GP did not have a clear picture of the patient's full history or the specific concerns that warranted specialist review.

CareBridge can prepare a Health Evidence Summary — a structured document that organises your symptom history, relevant test results, prior diagnoses or ruling-out, and the specific clinical questions you need a specialist to address. You give this to your GP when requesting the referral. A busy GP who receives a two-page document with a clear clinical narrative is far better placed to write a strong referral than one relying on a five-minute verbal summary.

This does not guarantee a referral or guarantee acceptance. But it significantly increases the quality of information reaching the specialist, and therefore the quality of what happens in the appointment.

How do I get started?

The first step is a free 15-minute introductory call — no obligation, no paperwork, no payment. You describe your situation; CareBridge explains whether and how it can help, and which service would be the right fit. If CareBridge is not the right fit, you will be told that directly.

Calls are available by video or phone. You can book a free call or reach out by WhatsApp. All services are delivered online, so CareBridge is available to patients across all of Australia — not only Perth.

You don't have to figure this out alone.

A free 15-minute intro call is the starting point. No obligation — just a conversation about your situation and whether CareBridge can help. If it is not the right fit, you will be told that directly.

See services & pricing

“I had six years of results, three specialists, and no idea how to put it all together. CareBridge helped me walk into that appointment with a document my GP actually read.”

— Patient experience, Perth WA

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