Support Connection I Support Coordination I Specialist Support Coordination
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LBWS Participant Handbook (1) (pdf)
DownloadThe participant journey (pdf)
DownloadFS Working with providers ER PDF_0 (pdf)
DownloadFS Using your NDIS plan PDF (pdf)
DownloadFS ER Support categories PDF (3) (pdf)
DownloadFS Creating your plan PDF (pdf)
DownloadFS Your plan meeting PDF (pdf)
DownloadFS Understanding consent ER DOCX (docx)
DownloadFS Applying to the NDIS (docx)
DownloadFor more than 35 years, One Door has designed and delivered expert mental health programs that are now accessible through the National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS). One Door Mental Health is a leading mental health provider specialising in severe and persistent mental illnesses such as schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, obsessive compulsive disorder, post-traumatic stress disorder, psychosis and schizoaffective disorder, borderline personality disorder.
Synapse provides a range of support services for people who have been impacted by brain injury and disability. These services promote quality of life, self-determination, and choice through information, specialist support, and targeted research activities.
Planet Puberty is a digital resource suite by Family Planning NSW that aims to provide parents and carers of children with intellectual disability and/or autism spectrum disorder with the latest information, strategies and resources for supporting their child through puberty.
Planet Puberty was co-designed with adults with intellectual disability and/or autism spectrum disorder across Australia who guided the design and development of the project at all stages. We worked closely with parents and carers to create a resource that provides relevant and useful information to help parents and carers support their child through puberty. We thank all these people for their time, feedback and contributions.
We also worked with a variety of organisations with experience and expertise across a number of different fields.
The National Disability Insurance Agency (NDIA) is an independent statutory agency. Our role is to implement the National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS), which will support a better life for hundreds of thousands of Australians with a significant and permanent disability and their families and carers.
National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS)
1800 800 110
The NDIS Quality and Safeguards Commission is an independent agency established to improve the quality and safety of NDIS supports and services. We regulate NDIS providers, provide national consistency, promote safety and quality services, resolve problems and identify areas for improvement.
Home | NDIS Quality and Safeguards Commission (ndiscommission.gov.au)
1800 035 554
DA was established in 2006 with the amalgamation of Disability Advocacy Service Hunter (DASH) and Advocacy Northwest (ANW). After a number of years working together, both services believed that they could provide a better service to more people with a disability by joining forces. Combined the services had 35 years experience of advocating for people with a disability. In 2016 Disability Information and Advocacy Service (DIAS) in Bathurst joined Disability Advocacy NSW to form our new Central West Region
Disability Advocacy NSW – Disability Advocacy NSW (DA) is a program of Advocacy Law Alliance Inc.
1300 365 085
An applicant is a person who has applied to access the NDIS, but has not yet heard whether they meet the eligibility criteria to become an NDIS participant.
Once a person has had their NDIS application approved, we stop calling them an applicant and begin referring to them as a participant.
A check-in is a conversation between a participant and their my NDIS contact. We schedule a check-in to ask:
If your NDIS plan is longer than one year, your check-in will usually be once every 12 months.
If your NDIS plan is one year long, your check-in will usually happen about 4 months before your plan reaches its reassessment date.
The NDIS can provide support to all people with disability, even if you aren’t an NDIS participant.
If you are between 9 and 64, we can connect you to information and supports available in your community. Also known as mainstream and community supports, these services are outside of the NDIS and generally available to everyone.
Community connections can help you take part in your community and do the things that are important to you. They do not give you any funded NDIS supports.
The Document Verification Service (DVS) external website is a national secure online system. Australian, State and Territory government agencies, including the NDIS, use the DVS to make sure identity documents are real.
We use the DVS to check identity documents given to you by Australian, State and Territory agencies.
Some examples of documents that can be verified are passports, licenses, utility bills and certifications. We’ll ask for your consent before we use the DVS.
Early childhood partners are local organisations funded by the NDIA to deliver the early childhood approach.
Our early childhood partners have teams of professionals with experience and clinical expertise in working with young children with developmental delay or disability and their families.
The term 'early childhood partner' may refer to either the partner organisation, or the staff working within the organisation.
Early connections are services provided by early childhood partners for children younger than 6 with developmental delay or children younger than 9 with disability and their families.
Early connections may include a combination of services such as connecting children and families to community and other government services, practical information relevant to a child’s development, early supports and assistance to apply to the NDIS.
Early supports may be available to children younger than 6 with developmental concerns.
Local area coordinators are organisations funded by the NDIA to deliver local area coordination services to people with disability aged between 9 and 64.
Mainstream supports are the supports from other government funded services like health, mental health and education.
Community supports are supports you can get through community organisations like peer-to-peer and community-based groups, religious groups and services from local councils.
When you contact us to find out about disability supports, or become an NDIS participant, we provide you with a dedicated contact person.
We call this person a my NDIS contact. Your my NDIS contact can be a local area coordinator, an early childhood partner or a person at the NDIA.
We built the my NDIS participant portal to work with our new computer system.
Participants with plans in our new computer system should use the my NDIS participant portal to:
If you have a plan in our new computer system, you can access the my NDIS participant portal through myGov.
Until your plan moves to our new computer system, you should continue to use the myplace portal to see and use your plan.
The new my NDIS provider portal is separate to the myplace provider portal. It is for NDIS providers.
We built the my NDIS provider portal to work with our new computer system.
When the participants providers work with have an NDIS plan in our new computer system, providers can use the my NDIS provider portal to see:
All existing providers who access the myplace provider portal will be able to access the my NDIS provider portal using their PRODA account.
To access the my NDIS provider portal, unregistered support coordinators and recovery coaches need to create a PRODA account.
There are two myplace portals – one for participants and one for providers.
Participants with plans in our old computer system should use the myplace participant portal to see their plan and pay for their supports.
Once you have a plan in our new computer system, you can start using the my NDIS participant portal to use your plan.
Participants can log into either portal through myGov. external website
The myplace provider portal is for providers to make claims and raise enquiries about claims and payments.
Providers should continue to use the myplace provider portal for all financial transactions with the NDIA.
NDIS plans developed in our new computer system won’t have service bookings. Instead, you can tell us who the providers you regularly work with are, and we record them on your plan. We call the providers recorded on a participant’s plan my providers.
Participants need to tell us who their my providers are when they have:
When you record my providers for your plan, we don’t have to check with you before we pay them.
We used to call my providers 'participant-endorsed providers'. We changed this name because we heard from participants and providers in the Tasmania test that we needed to use more plain English in our language and descriptions.
Your NDIA planner is the person at the NDIA who develops your plan, makes decisions about it and approves it.
They look at your last plan, the information and evidence you’ve given us and talk with you about your living situation, goals and day-to-day supports.
Your NDIA planner makes sure the supports in your plan fit together and work as a reasonable and necessary package of supports.
Our old computer system was slow and hard to change. We built a new computer system to help our staff and partners in their work and deliver better outcomes for participants.
Our staff and partners named our new computer system. They called it PACE. Applicants, participants and providers may sometimes hear our new computer system referred to by its name.
When we develop your next plan, we will tell you which computer system it is in – our old system or our new one.
When you know which computer system your plan is in, you can tell your providers and know which participant portal to use (myplace or my NDIS participant portal).
PACE is the name of our new computer system.
Our staff and partners named it. Applicants, participants and providers may sometimes hear our new computer system referred to by its name, or as ‘our new computer system’.
NDIS partners are community-based organisations the NDIA funds and works with to help deliver the Scheme in some parts of Australia.
Partners, or NDIS partners, is the name we use when referring to early childhood partners and local area coordinators.
A plan implementation meeting can happen after your plan is approved, or you need extra support to use your plan.
A plan implementation meeting is a chance to talk to your my NDIS contact about how to use your funding, arrange your supports and work towards building your skills and independence.
If you have asked for changes to your NDIS plan, and these changes have not been approved, we will offer you a plan implementation meeting to talk about how you can use your plan flexibly.
A plan meeting is when you meet with your NDIA planner to talk through your next plan.
Your NDIA planner will talk to you about your living situation, goals and day-to-day supports. Your planner will check they have a good understanding of your situation.
Your NDIA planner will explain how they developed your plan and how they made reasonable and necessary decisions about the supports in your plan.
Your NDIA planner can approve your plan at your meeting.
We’ll talk about how you want to manage your funding at your plan meeting. There are 3 ways to manage your plan. We call these plan management types.
Sometimes also called Agency-managed, this means you have asked the NDIA to pay for supports from your plan, on your behalf.
You must use NDIS-registered providers for NDIA-managed supports. You need to tell us who your my providers are.
If you have a plan manager, this means you have funding in your plan to pay for someone to manage your plan. Your plan manager pays for your supports from your plan, on your behalf.
You need to tell us who your plan manager is, so we can record them as a my provider on your plan.
If your funding is self-managed, you are responsible for paying your providers. You will need to keep a record of the supports you buy, like a receipt or an invoice. You will use the my NDIS participant portal or NDIS app to make payment claims.
If your plan is coming to an end, or you need a significant change to your current plan, you may need a new plan. We call this process to develop a new plan a plan reassessment.
When we do a plan reassessment, we’ll consider your plan as a whole. You’ll meet with an NDIS planner to create your new plan. Your old plan will end, and we replace your plan with a new one. This means you will receive a new plan with new funding.
We’ll do a plan reassessment when:
A plan variation is a small change to your current plan. When we do a plan variation, we only make changes to the part of your plan we vary. Your current plan keeps going.
Small changes we can make include:
PRODA stands for provider digital access. It is an online identity verification and authentication system. It lets providers securely access government online services.
NDIS providers need a PRODA account to access the my NDIS provider portal or myplace portal to view participant information and to make payment claims.
Recurring supports is a new support category that may be funded in your NDIS plan. It is only for participants who receive transport funding. Participants who are not eligible for transport funding will have a zero-dollar amount against this support category in their plan.
If you have support coordination or recovery coach services in your plan, we can check with the provider you choose to see if they can work with you. We call this a request for service.
We use our new computer system to send a request for service when you:
After your provider accepts the request for service, they will be recorded as a my provider on your plan.
Your NDIS funding is made up of support categories. Each support category has information about the types of supports you can buy with your funding. We group support categories into 4 different budgets:
Because your plan is based on your individual needs, you might not have funding for all support categories. You must use your funding in the way it is described in your plan and buy supports that meet the NDIS funding criteria. This means they must be directly related to your disability, effective and beneficial, and value for money.
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