Commercial
Cameras and Image Verification for Disability Support
CCTV and consent
Camera placement
| Location | Useful for | Privacy note |
|---|---|---|
| Front door and ramp | Visitors, deliveries, support-worker arrival, night activity. | Usually lower privacy risk if not aimed at neighbours. |
| Driveway or carer parking | Arrival records and access safety. | Keep view purposeful. |
| Shared living transition | Incident context if agreed by the person. | Needs clear consent and access rules. |
| Bedroom, bathroom, change area | Usually avoid. | High dignity and privacy risk. |
Support-worker considerations
- Do not use hidden cameras.
- Document whether entry cameras exist and why.
- Decide who can review footage and when.
- Do not turn support into casual family surveillance.
- Use footage for incidents, access records or safety concerns, not curiosity.
CCTV vs image verification
| Option | Best for | Limit |
|---|---|---|
| HiLook CCTV | Continuous recording at entries, ramp, driveway, garage and agreed shared zones. | Needs stronger privacy rules. |
| AX PRO PIRCAM | Event context after an alarm trigger. | Not a full-time care camera. |
| No indoor camera | When privacy or consent concerns outweigh benefit. | Use panic, intercom and routines instead. |
Frequently asked questions
Can cameras be used in bedrooms?
Usually avoid this. Only consider private-room cameras where there is a serious, consented care reason and appropriate advice.
Should support workers be told about entry cameras?
Yes. Avoid hidden monitoring and document the purpose, access rules and review process.


















