Support coordination: Lessons from the trenches – Question 11

Published date: November 8, 2022
Last updated: December 2, 2025
Author: My Plan Manager
Support coordination: Lessons from the trenches – Question 11

Lessons from the trenches - panel members

What’s one outcome you’re most proud of having supported a client to achieve?

MP – Appropriate funding for a child to remain in the care of his family (kinship).

VS – I had pushed for months to get answers from the NDIA regarding Supported Independent Living (SIL) for my client. Someone had made a mistake in the NDIA and had not processed the approval in home and living. Eventually, after several calls and emails, I got a new plan and a decision from the NDIA that the client had been approved. She passed away a week before receiving the good news.

AT – Good question. Finally receiving the extra funding required for a participant – it was an ongoing battle, and they finally received a positive outcome.

SG – Too many to choose from. I supported a person through the AAT and had all funds reinstated. I’ve supported many people into housing and also with discharges from hospital, which is always a good feeling. I also supported someone home to die peacefully with their family around them instead of in hospital.

EH – There isn’t one outcome – all the good outcomes make me proud! However, the thing that puts the smile on my face every day is when I empower a person to see the funding they have put into practice so that they can live their life.

HR – One outcome I am most recently proud of is having supported a participant to get a higher spec wheelchair than the base model.

SH – I was able to exit a participant out of aged care (she was over 65). She obtained SIL and Specialist Disability Accommodation (SDA) funding.

ZD – The best outcome I have supported a client to achieve is an 18-year-old young man who lives with Autism Level 2 with intellectual impairment. He was living at home with his Mum, Dad, and two younger siblings and he was very angry, with behaviours of concern, which was causing extreme emotional and physical distress for his family. The family relationships with this young man were to the point where they were falling apart and he was filled with hate towards his family members. The family home was also being damaged by this young man due to his anger at not wanting to be living at home any more.

I gathered a lot of evidence and completed a change of circumstances form and request for home and living for SIL accommodation and sent that to the NDIA as an urgent review. After three escalations on this case and two months of waiting, I received the good news that this young man had received all the funding he needed to move into a SIL home.

The big smile on this young man's face, and the excitement he exuded when I met with him and his father at his new home, made me feel so proud of the work and effort I put into this case. My heart was so happy too.

SC – Connecting clients with their families.

November 8, 2022

You may also like...

  • Support coordinators frozen outSupport coordinators frozen out
    Hundreds of support coordinators around Australia have been affected by a price freeze for the third year running.
  • NDIS mental health toolkitNDIS mental health toolkit
    If you have lived experienced of the mental health system and want to gain access to – or are a participant in – the National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS), we’ve found a great resource for you!
  • Support coordination – the delicate art of balance – Q1Support coordination – the delicate art of balance – Q1
    We spoke with five thought leaders in the sector – members of our support coordinator editorial roundtable – and asked them how they navigate their pivotal role as a conduit between their clients and the supports and services they need to achieve their goals and live the lives they choose.
  • Support coordination – the delicate art of balance – Q11Support coordination – the delicate art of balance – Q11
    We spoke with five thought leaders in the sector – members of our support coordinator editorial roundtable – and asked them how they navigate their pivotal role as a conduit between their clients and the supports and services they need to achieve their goals and live the lives they choose.