ACCHS-based support
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Provide education, workshops, information sessions, and support groups (especially for children with intellectual disability) for families
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Grassroots-based; educating families and teachers on disability and available services; focus on prevention
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Opportunities for carers to speak with health professionals/service providers face-to-face (rather than computer or phone).
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Work within a family-centred, flexible model, personal approach, holistic approach
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Collect accurate data on number of children in the community with disabilities to inform local and government strategies
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Aboriginal Child Disability Support Workers
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Need for a dedicated support worker/ Aboriginal Child Disability Worker with disability expertise - role in care navigation, health education, interpretation of medical jargon and liaison support with services
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Work within a centralised, case manager model; explore other effective and acceptable models (including funding models) in urban Aboriginal populations
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Increased flexibility
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Increased flexibility and responsiveness of respite services
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Minimise red-tape and rigid criteria, particularly during crisis; increase flexibility for Aboriginal families
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School-based support
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Utilise school data on Indigenous and disability status to ensure adequate resource distribution; facilitate linkages between other support agencies and schools
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Increase awareness of disability and support available across professions and within communities; increase opportunity for network building across sectors
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Contact Information
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Routinely updated listing of services and contacts for support (general and disability- specific information; with consideration for child’s developmental stages)
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Inter-sectoral partnerships |
Partnerships between schools, parents, and community controlled organisations were also seen as strategies to enable access to services. |
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