Exclusive: Three key actions needed to get NDIS participants out of hospital
Danielle Kutchel
As people with disability languish in hospital despite being medically ready for discharge, a report being given to government will suggest three key actions to help provide more appropriate accommodation support.
A disability service provider hopes a meeting of the National Cabinet will provide answers to the crisis in pathways out of hospital for people with disability.
Premiers and the Prime Minister will on Friday receive a report from the Improving Care Pathways Taskforce, which deals with how to get NDIS participants who are medically fit to leave hospital, into appropriate disability care.
Ahead of the meeting on Friday morning, Dr Martin Laverty, CEO of Aruma, told Pro Bono News he hopes the report will spur action from Australia?s political leaders on the crisis engulfing the disability pathway out of hospital.
Earlier this month, it was revealed that thousands of NDIS participants are waiting an average of 160 days in hospital despite being medically ready for discharge.
NDIS minister Bill Shorten promised at the time to respond more quickly to people with disability once they were notified that they could be discharged from hospital, and to hire more NDIS staff in hospitals to fast-track discharge decisions.
The taskforce report will present options to discharge people with disability to appropriate disability care facilities and relieve the pressure on hospitals.
Aruma made three suggestions in its submission to the taskforce:
- Forecasting the demand for disability housing support for the number of people with disability who are likely to need transition from hospital to disability housing.
- Providing incentives to disability housing support providers to maintain agreed volumes of standby places where required, ready to receive people with disability when they are discharged from hospital.
- Expanding discharge coordination of pathways from hospital and aged care into disability housing.