NDIS Positive Behaviour Support in Brisbane, Sydney, Melbourne
NDIS Positive Behaviour Support provided by Specialist Practitioners provides services to help individuals achieve their behaviour goals and enhance their quality of life. NDIS Positive Behaviour Support services provided for Brisbane, Gold Coast, Sunshine Coast, Queensland, Sydney, Melbourne, Adelaide, Hobart, Canberra, Perth, and Darwin. Happy Peeps deliver compassionate, evidence-based support designed to empower participants across Australia.
NDIS Positive Behaviour Support Practitioner Specialists design tailored plans and interventions for individuals with psychosocial disabilities, mental health challenges, or physical disabilities.”
Ndis Positive Behaviour Support Plan services include:
- NDIS Positive Behaviour Support Plans and Interventions for psychosocial disabilities, mental health or people with physical disabilities
- Behaviour support plans provide strategies to address behaviours.
- Evidence Based Positive Behaviour Assessments for Adults & Children to protect the values and rights of people with disability
- Improving and regulating the quality and safety of positive behaviour support
- Reducing and eliminating restrictive practices.
- Mental Health Service Assessment provided by Social Work Behaviour practitioners that is respectful and provided with empathy, care, and compassion
- Support individuals who experience impairment across their lifetime and their capacity to carry out everyday activities and without support capacity is substantially reduced.
- Assessment designed to assess how a participants psychosocial mental health condition impacts everyday life
- The Assessment and planning focuses on improving a person’s quality of life and understanding the reasons behind behaviour and ways to meet a person’s needs.
- The Assessment will identify your strengths and a positive plan to assist you to meet your own personal goals.
Developing NDIS Positive Behaviour Support Plans
- Develop an interim report within 1 month of engagement when Regulated Restrictive Practices are included in the plan
- Consulting with the NDIS provider who may using the restrictive practice.
- Provide a functional Behaviour Assessment to understand the person’s behaviour, what is happening an why
- Develop a comprehensive behaviour support plan within 6 months of engagement
- Try to reduce and eliminate the need for the regulated restrictive practices
- Consider any previous behaviour support assessments
- Make changes to the person’s environment that may reduce or remove the need for the restrictive practice
- Consult with the participant and their family, guardian or other relevant people
When consulting we will provide details of the regulated restrictive practice we intend to include in a behaviour support plan.
Strategies to Implement the NDIS Positive Behaviour Support Plan
- The plan will develop strategies to assist you with learning new skills
- The intervention will assist with making changes in your environment
- The intervention will guide your support team to assist you with developing your new skills.
Psychosocial & Mental Health Behaviour Support Services
Specialist behaviour support providers Social Work Behaviour Support Practitioners work closely with NDIS participants and others to:
- develop a behaviour support plan
- put the behaviour support plan into action
- check to make sure things are getting better over time.
Our Social Worker Therapists are qualified to complete a Specialist Positive Behaviour Support Plan and Intervention to assist you to provide evidence for your NDIS reviews. The Behaviour Practitioner will assist you to develop a Behavioural Plan and Intervention to assist you to reduce behaviours and improve your quality of life and will provide the Ndis with the requested evidence to support you at your plan reviews. We will use the following preferred NDIS Assessment tools. Other assessment will be completed when required.
- Positive Behaviour Functional Assessment (FBA)
- Positive Behaviour Plan
- Positive Behaviour Interventions
- Restrictive Practices
Restrictive Practices
A restrictive practice is any practice or intervention that limits a person’s human rights or freedom of movement.
This is sometimes used to keep a person with disability or others safe.
However, restrictive practices do not:
- result in lasting positive change
- meet the person’s needs or improve their quality of life
- address the reasons for the behaviour and can sometimes make the behaviour worse.
Types of restrictive practices
The NDIS Commission regulates five types of restrictive practices.
- Seclusion: When the person is in a room or a space alone and is not allowed to leave. Or when the person is in a room or a space alone and thinks they cannot leave.
- Chemical restraint: When the person is given medicine to stop or reduce their behaviour. A medication purpose form can help clarify the purpose of the medication.
- Mechanical restraint: When a device or equipment is used to stop or reduce a person’s behaviour. It can make it hard for them to move or access a certain part of their body.
- Physical restraint: When someone holds the person or a part of their body so they cannot move freely. They hold the person to stop or reduce their behaviour.
- Environmental restraint: When the person is stopped from having or doing certain things. Or when the person is stopped from accessing certain places in their home or community.
High Risk Practices
Certain practices pose a high risk of harm to NDIS participants, potentially causing long-term physical or mental injury. These harmful methods, including harsh punishments and physical restraints, are prohibited and illegal in many regions.
- Some practices put a person with disability at a high risk of being harmed. This can include serious long-term physical or mental injury and even death.
- Certain types of physical restraint and harsh punishments can be considered abuse or neglect.
- These practices will not be used or included in a behaviour support plan. In some states and territories these practices are against the law.
At Happy Peeps, we are committed to delivering compassionate and effective NDIS Positive Behaviour Support services tailored to each individual’s needs. Our evidence-based approaches aim to enhance quality of life, foster independence, and ensure dignity. Trust HappyPeeps to guide you on your journey toward achieving your personal goals with care and expertise.