Our behaviour support practitioners work closely with your therapy and support teams and community services to ensure you have the resources and opportunities to achieve your goals.
From communicating your needs, making choices, and having more control over your life, expect our team to help you do the things you want, your way.
At Everyday Independence, we understand that behaviour often expresses unmet needs. Our Sutherland behaviour support practitioners focus on identifying the underlying causes of challenging behaviours and providing support to reduce or eliminate them, ultimately enhancing your quality of life.
Our behaviour support practitioners work closely with your therapy and support teams and community services to ensure you have the resources and opportunities to achieve your goals.
Our Sutherland positive behaviour support helps children, teenagers, and adults with disabilities achieve the changes that are most important to them. These may include:
Your practitioner is with you every step of the way, ensuring everyone supporting you is integrating personalised strategies into all aspects of your life and being consistent.
Your practitioner connects with essential services – mental health, parent support, employment, and more – finding opportunities and resources to help reach your goals.
Behaviour Support Plans are tailored to your strengths and goals, incorporating the therapies and services needed to drive positive, lasting change.
We deliver positive behaviour support with The Everyday Way. Your behaviour support practitioner works as part of your broader therapy team to provide behaviour support, in the places you spend your time.
Because the best way to deliver positive change is to look at your whole life and engage a team of practitioners with the understanding and skills that are vital to helping you make the changes that matter to you.
To get started with positive behaviour support in Sutherland, a behaviour support practitioner or your lead practitioner comes to your home to get to know you, your family and other members of your support team. They take a whole of life approach to set you on your pathway to positive change.
Visit our NDIS pages for information on getting your plan funded.
The journey to enjoying more everyday life activities begins with creating an individualised Positive Behaviour Support (PBS) plan. We’ll collaborate with you and your trusted support team to ensure we’re all working towards a unified purpose, focusing on building capacity.
A PBS plan will be developed (within 30 days of your assessment if unauthorised restrictive practices are used) to share, review, and regularly update with your support team. On occasions where a restrictive practice is in place, the plan will be sent to the relevant states and territories’ Office of the Senior Practitioner for authorisation and the NDIS commission for monitoring the use of the restrictive practice.
We’ll help everyone involved understand the plan and how to use it in everyday life.
Restrictive practices are any interventions or practices that restrict the rights or freedom of movement of a person. They’re used in response to a behaviour of concern and should always be considered as a last resort. Sadly, they are being used to manage the behaviour of people with disabilities, and can be extremely distressing. Our highly trained team of behaviour support practitioners are committed to reducing and eliminating the use of restrictive practices, so that people’s dignity and independence is regained, and quality of life is improved.
Under the NDIS, certain restrictive practices are regulated, which means they must be authorised by the State or Territory in which the person lives and monitored/ reported to the NDIS Commission of Quality and Safeguards. Restrictive practices Guide include chemical, physical, environmental, and mechanical restraints, and seclusion.
Behaviour support services should be considered if you or someone you care for uses challenging behaviours. These are behaviours that are unexpected and may lead to others around the person feeling frustrated, distressed or fearful.
We promise to help improve the person’s quality of life and those who support them. This includes developing the skills of those supports so that the person’s needs are met and they have the opportunities to make meaningful social connections and participate in the activities they enjoy.
To get started with positive behaviour support, your NDIS plan must include Improved Relationships (IR) funding. If you have IR funding, simply fill out an online form to tell us a bit about you, where you live and what your goals are so that we can match you to the right team.
A practitioner will then do an initial assessment at your home to understand your goals and get to know you, your family and other support team members.
After they gather all the information they need, the disability practitioner will pull together your dedicated therapy team.
Your follow-up appointments or focussed assessments will help to develop specific strategies to reduce behaviours of concern and may include occupational, speech, and physiotherapies, assistive technologies, and/ or social intervention. One or two of these team members may attend the assessment depending on your immediate goals.
This approach ensures you get the best value from your NDIS funding.
Our behaviour support practitioners are curious about behaviours and understanding why people use challenging behaviours. They are occupational therapists, mental health nurses, registered nurses, psychologists, social workers, behavioural/social scientists or Social Science and developmental educators who work to change attitudes, expectations and outcomes so that people with disability can live a much better life.
They have been selected for their skills and qualities, and they offer exceptional evidence-based therapy support with compassion and an open mind.