Local Government
Skin cancer screening across every depot and crew
Parks, roads, waste, water — your outdoor teams are spread across the municipality. Flare screens them all without coordinating a single clinic day.
Why councils struggle with screening
Local government outdoor crews are spread across parks, roads, waste, water, and building services — each running different rosters from different depots. Coordinating a screening clinic means picking a location that's convenient for nobody, losing a day of productivity, and still missing the crews who were on leave or on a different shift. Councils that try usually screen the same 30% of workers every year while the rest go unchecked.
Who's affected
Outdoor roles across local government:
How it works
You provide the roster. We handle the rest.
Your worker snaps a photo
You provide your worker contact details and we send each worker an SMS with a link to their personal screening profile. They photograph the area of concern and mark the location on a body map. No downloads, no appointments, no time off site.
Our clinical team reviews it
Each submission goes through an image quality check, then nurse practitioner assessment. If a concern is identified, it's escalated to a GP for review and sign-off. Your team does nothing — the clinical pathway runs independently.
Results go straight to the worker
Within 48 hours, the worker receives their outcome. If a concern is flagged, a GP-signed referral letter goes to their phone — ready for a Medicare-covered consultation. You receive aggregate participation data only.
“We have 14 depots — there was no way to get everyone to one clinic. Flare solved that problem.”