Complete Disability Services SA
About Complete Disability Services SA
Complete Disability Services SA is an NDIS-registered provider based in Payneham, South Australia, serving participants across Barossa Light, Eastern Adelaide, Murraylands, Southern Adelaide, Western Adelaide, Yorke Mid North. They offer 9 types of support including speech pathology, support worker, plan management and more.
Based on 14 Google reviews, Complete Disability Services SA holds a 4.6-star rating, which puts them in the top tier for provider feedback in the Barossa Light service area.
Services Complete Disability Services SA provides
- Speech pathology
- Support worker
- Plan management
- Support coordination
- Psychology
- Physiotherapy
- SDA
- Transport
- Community nursing
Understanding speech pathology under the NDIS
Speech pathology under the NDIS divides into three broad practice areas: paediatric developmental work (articulation, language delay, social communication, literacy foundations); adult acquired conditions (aphasia after stroke or brain injury, dysarthria from neurological conditions, voice disorders); and lifespan dysphagia and AAC. These are different skill sets, and a speech pathologist who excels in one rarely covers all three at depth. The right question to ask isn't "do you do NDIS work" but "what proportion of your caseload looks like my situation."
Augmentative and alternative communication (AAC) is one of the highest-leverage areas of NDIS speech pathology. For participants with limited verbal communication, an AAC assessment determines whether a low-tech solution (communication boards, visual schedules, key-word sign), a mid-tech solution (communication apps on a generic tablet) or a high-tech dedicated speech-generating device best fits the user's cognitive profile, motor abilities, and communication contexts. Speech-generating devices are funded under Capital Supports — Assistive Technology, with the speech pathologist's prescription forming the core of the application.
Dysphagia (swallowing) management is the highest-risk area of speech pathology. Mismanaged dysphagia is associated with aspiration pneumonia and choking deaths. NDIS-funded speech pathologists assessing swallowing should have specific dysphagia training and ideally access to instrumental assessment (videofluoroscopic swallow study or fibreoptic endoscopic evaluation of swallowing) where clinically indicated.
The NDIS rate is $224.62/hr. Sessions typically run 50-60 minutes plus clinical-notes and treatment-planning time. For paediatric work, parent coaching is increasingly the dominant model — directly training caregivers to embed strategies in daily routines is more effective than therapist-only contact.
What to ask before choosing an NDIS provider
Before signing a service agreement with any NDIS provider, including Complete Disability Services SA, it’s worth having a conversation about a few key things. What are the hourly rates, including loadings for evenings, weekends and public holidays? What cancellation fees apply, and what notice period do they require? Who will your regular support worker or practitioner be, and what happens if they’re sick or on leave? How does the provider handle complaints? These questions are standard — any reputable provider will have clear answers.
If Complete Disability Services SA is registered with the NDIS Quality and Safeguards Commission, they’re bound by the NDIS Code of Conduct and must meet service standards audited by approved quality auditors. This covers everything from worker screening to incident reporting. Unregistered providers can still be used by plan-managed and self-managed participants but aren’t subject to the same oversight.
It’s also worth understanding your service agreement before you sign it. The agreement should clearly state the supports being delivered, the price per hour or unit, any cancellation policy, how travel charges are handled, and how either party can end the agreement. Under the NDIS, you can usually change providers, subject to the notice and cancellation terms in your service agreement. If a provider’s service agreement doesn’t include a reasonable exit clause, that’s worth questioning.
If you’re unsure about any aspect of choosing a provider, your support coordinator or local area coordinator (LAC) can help. They can explain what to look for, accompany you to initial meetings, and assist with setting up service agreements that protect your interests. Keeping records of your interactions with providers — save invoices, note key conversations, and track whether the services delivered match what was agreed — will make plan reviews smoother and provide evidence if you ever need to raise a complaint.
NDIS supports in Barossa Light
The Barossa Light service district covers 78+ suburbs and hosts 223+ registered NDIS providers. Participants in this area typically access services in their local community, though many providers including Complete Disability Services SA travel to clients at home. Travel charges under the NDIS are capped and must be agreed in your service agreement before work begins.
Most participants in Barossa Light access a mix of services — commonly community nursing, sda and transport. Whether you’re looking for ongoing support or need a specific assessment, comparing providers in your area is the best way to find the right fit for your goals and circumstances.
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