
Kim Whiteley
Chief Executive Officer
NATSIAAC
Kim Whiteley is a respected national leader whose expertise and lived experience are deeply grounded in her culture and identity. A proud descendant of the Warramunga Bogan River people, born and raised in Wellington, NSW, Kim brings more than 40 years of leadership across education, health, justice, and land rights — with a strong focus on First Nations strategy, governance, and partnered community engagement.
Kim has held leadership roles within government, community-controlled, and not-for-profit sectors, including Chief Executive Officer of the Remote Area Health Corps (RAHC), Western Zone Director at the NSW Aboriginal Land Council, and Head of First Nations Strategy & Engagement at Cancer Council Australia. She is widely respected for championing cultural safety, advancing governance, driving transformative reform, and achieving measurable outcomes that advance equity and improve services for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples, families, and communities.
Kim has also contributed her expertise and leadership through service on advisory bodies such as at the NSW Agency for Clinical Innovation, the NSW/ACT PHN Aboriginal Primary Health Care Executive, and the Cancer Institute NSW Indigenous Advisory Committee. In addition, she currently holds a ministerial appointment as a Board Member of the Homes NSW Aboriginal Housing Office.
As Chief Executive Officer of NATSIAACC, Kim brings her deep cross-sector expertise and cultural authority to champion the voices of Elders and Older People, strengthen national advocacy, and influence policy reform. She is committed to ensuring ageing and aged care services are culturally safe, trauma-aware, community-led, and grounded in respect, dignity, and self-determination.
SESSIONS
Day 1
2:35
Panel: Delivering inclusive and culturally safe care for every older person
How can aged care organisations translate the Aged Care Act’s commitments to equity and cultural safety into real, practical change, especially for First Nations Elders, LGBTQIA+ seniors, people from culturally diverse backgrounds, and those living in regional and remote communities?
Gain insight into practical strategies, tools, and partnerships (i.e. First Nations Stakeholder Communications Toolkit) that supports culturally safe practice, improves access and ensures no older person is left behind
Moderator: Kim Whiteley, Chief Executive Officer, NATSIAAC
Anne Burgess, Chair, Aged Care Council of Elders
Maggie Balodis, Quality and Risk Advisor, Aboriginal Community Services
