🧠 4% of NDIS participants — Acquired brain injury represents approximately 4% of NDIS participants, with many entering the scheme after traumatic accidents, strokes, or medical events.

About Acquired Brain Injury (ABI)

Acquired brain injury (ABI) refers to brain damage that occurs after birth, including traumatic brain injury from accidents, stroke, brain tumours, infections, and hypoxia. ABI can affect cognition, behaviour, physical function, communication, and emotional regulation. The NDIS provides long-term support for people with permanent ABI, though the boundary between NDIS and health system funding can be complex.

Key NDIS supports for acquired brain injury

Key NDIS supports for ABI include neuropsychology and psychology for cognitive rehabilitation, occupational therapy for daily living skills, physiotherapy for physical recovery, speech pathology for communication, support workers for daily assistance, behaviour support for managing behavioural changes, and support coordination to navigate complex service systems.

Psychology Occupational therapy Physiotherapy Speech pathology Support worker Behaviour support Support coordination

Acquired brain injury providers in Western District

W
Western District Hand & Occupational Therapy Services
728 Raglan Parade, Warrnambool VIC 3280, Australia
★★★★★5(2 reviews)
C
Country Therapy
18 Tuson St, Ararat VIC 3377, Australia
★★★★½4.7(15 reviews)
E
Everyday Independence Western Melbourne
7/28 West Ct, Derrimut VIC 3030, Australia
★★★★½4.5(31 reviews)
B
Ballarat Occupational Therapy Services
101 Drummond St N, Lake Wendouree VIC 3350, Australia
★★★★☆4(1 reviews)
W
West End Support Services
128 Whitelaw Ave, Delacombe VIC 3356, Australia
★★★½☆3.9(11 reviews)
M
Mobile Disability Physio
Suite 27/477 Warrigal Rd, Moorabbin VIC 3189, Australia
★★★★★5(1 reviews)
P
Physio Inq Victoria
Level 3/3 Bowen Cres, Melbourne VIC 3004, Australia
★★★★☆4.3(35 reviews)
B
Better Rehab - Geelong
23 W Fyans St, Newtown VIC 3220, Australia
★★★★★5(7 reviews)

Choosing a acquired brain injury provider

Prioritise providers with experience in acquired brain injury rehabilitation, understanding of cognitive and behavioural changes after brain injury, ability to work as part of a multidisciplinary team, patience with the often-slow pace of recovery, and familiarity with the intersection of health and NDIS funding.

💡 NDIS plan tips for acquired brain injury

ABI plans often evolve significantly over time — early plans may focus on intensive rehabilitation, while later plans shift toward maintenance and community participation. Support coordination is almost always included given the complexity. The boundary between health-funded rehabilitation and NDIS-funded disability support can be unclear — a good support coordinator helps navigate this.

🧠

Support acquired brain injury participants in Western District?

Get listed on ProviderScout and reach NDIS participants searching for acquired brain injury support in Western District. Free to list, paid plans from $49/month.

Claim your free listing

Frequently asked questions

What NDIS support is available for acquired brain injury in Western District?

Key NDIS supports for ABI include neuropsychology and psychology for cognitive rehabilitation, occupational therapy for daily living skills, physiotherapy for physical recovery, speech pathology for communication, support workers for daily assistance, behaviour support for managing behavioural changes, and support coordination to navigate complex service systems.

How do I find a good acquired brain injury provider in Western District?

Prioritise providers with experience in acquired brain injury rehabilitation, understanding of cognitive and behavioural changes after brain injury, ability to work as part of a multidisciplinary team, patience with the often-slow pace of recovery, and familiarity with the intersection of health and NDIS funding.

What should my NDIS plan include for acquired brain injury?

ABI plans often evolve significantly over time — early plans may focus on intensive rehabilitation, while later plans shift toward maintenance and community participation. Support coordination is almost always included given the complexity. The boundary between health-funded rehabilitation and NDIS-funded disability support can be unclear — a good support coordinator helps navigate this.

Can I change my acquired brain injury providers?

Yes — you have full choice and control over your providers under the NDIS. You can change providers at any time, subject to any service agreements in place. ProviderScout makes it easy to compare acquired brain injury providers in Western District and find alternatives.

Other disability types in Western District

Acquired brain injury providers in nearby areas