While the concept of person centred practice is not new, it is an issue that is coming to the fore particularly with the advent of the National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS).

In the past, the most common service approaches to working with people with a disability were ‘service centred’ – where support was related to what the service provider could offer – or ‘problem centred’ – where a therapist or support worker made decisions about a person’s life based on their own skills and experience.

A person centred approach focuses on making sure a person with a disability is at the centre of all decisions and actions that relate to their life and their support.

What is person centred practice?

Being person centred assumes that an individual can determine the direction of their life based on their own strengths, abilities, networks and preferences to meet their goals at any stage in their life. The person requesting or requiring support is the driver, rather than the organisation providing the support.

What is self-direction?

Self-direction, or self-directed funding, lets the person with a disability and their family decide how to use their funding to best meet their needs. It provides choice and control over the supports and services used.

The NDIS has been designed based on self-direction. In Queensland, you can self-direct your support through Your Life Your Choice.

Queensland disability services

In Queensland, Department of Communities, Child Safety and Disability Services (Disability Services) initiated a self-directed funding model in 2012. Prior to this, Disability Services provided funding to services, and people with a disability were referred to these services.

By taking on a person centred framework, the government acknowledged that the person with the disability and their family were often the best placed to know what is needed to meet their needs.

In some cases, Disability Services holds the person’s funding and they make payments directly to the person’s bank account. This is referred to as ‘direct payments’.

Alternatively funding may be held by a host provider who assists the person and their family to manage their money. In both cases, the person gets to direct where, when, how and on what their funding is spent. 

Implementing person centred approaches

Person centred approaches require that resources be used flexibly to achieve what is important to the individual.

For a person with a disability, good planning is essential so that everyone in the person’s life is aligned with them about what they want to achieve in their life and how they want to achieve it. It is also a requirement to ensure that the person is able to use their funding to build the life they want to live.

For services organisations, and the people who work there, it is important to listen to clients and work with them and their families to help them achieve what is important to the person, rather than trying to slot them into predefined service offerings.

Real person centeredness comes from:

  • Listening and being willing to hear and act. It calls for all parts of an organisation to listen to what’s important to the person now and into their future.
  • Giving up power over the person and being willing to work with the person’s capacities and choices and assisting them to find ways to overcome barriers.
  • A willingness to work with the person’s family, network and community to enable what is important to them to become a reality. 

Blogs on person centred approaches

MS Queensland has led the collaboration of 11 Progressive Neurological Disease organisations, called The NeuroCare Network - we are working together to provide better outcomes for Queenslanders living with progressive neurological and neuromuscular disease. The NeuroCare Network is hosting a Q&...
The Early Childhood Early Intervention (ECEI) Approach is how the NDIS is delivering early childhood intervention for children aged 0-6 years. The overall aim of ECEI is to ensure that parents or primary caregivers are able to provide young children who have developmental delay or disabilities with...
The University of Southhampton is running a free online course around digital inclusion, titled Digital Accessibility: Enabling Participation in the Information Society . The course runs for five weeks, commencing on 17 October 2016. This course will help you to understand how those with sensory,...
Four organisations in the disability sector share how and why they responded to sector changes by launching an innovation strategy. Three months into the full implementation of the biggest reform the disability sector in Australia has ever seen, Social Ventures Australia spoke to four disability...
Disability Action Week is held annually in September with the aim of empowering people with disability, raising awareness of disability issues, and improving access and inclusion throughout the wider community. With 1 in 5 Queenslanders having a disability, and disability touching the lives of most...
The National Disability Insurance Agency have translated information about the NDIS into ten languages other than English. The resource is the My NDIS Pathway Brochure . My NDIS pathway is a guide to becoming an NDIS participant. This information helps participants to understand the path they will...
This one day forum will explore a wide range of topics including: What are Queenslanders with Intellectual Disabilities saying about policies & decisions that affect their lives? What options exist for Queenslanders with Intellectual Disabilities to have a Voice in policy-making? What are some...
The Centre for Applied Disability Research (CADR) Disability Knowledge Clearing House has been launched, to help people navigate the new disability market under the NDIS. The Clearing House exists to help people understand 'what works, for whom, under what circumstances, at what cost’. You will...
Disability affects almost 1 in 5 Queenslanders across a range of ages, cultures and locations. The NDIS (National Disability Insurance Scheme) is expected to create between 15,900 and 19,400 additional jobs across Queensland when fully implemented. For more information, watch the video created by...
The National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS) has officially started in Queensland today, signalling the beginning of a new era in disability services and huge opportunity for new workers to join the sector. The NDIS is the biggest social reform in more than 40 years, giving people with...

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