Frequently Asked Questions

Have questions about NDIS Support Work, Allied Health Assistance, community participation, or in-home support?

All For You Therapy provides NDIS Support Work and Allied Health Assistance for children and adults across South East Melbourne. Below are answers to common questions about our services, funding, referrals, and how support can work at home or in the community.

About Our Services

What services does All For You Therapy provide?

All For You Therapy provides NDIS Support Work and Allied Health Assistance for children and adults across South East Melbourne.

Our support may include daily routines, independence building, community access, appointments, social participation, in-home support, and therapy-related activities under allied health guidance.

We support children and adults who need practical, person-centred NDIS support. Support is tailored to each participant’s goals, routine, support needs, and NDIS plan.

Yes. We provide in-home NDIS support for participants who need help with daily routines, independence, confidence-building, therapy-related practice, or practical support in a familiar environment.

NDIS Support Work Questions

Do you provide NDIS Support Work?

Yes. All For You Therapy provides NDIS Support Work for children and adults across South East Melbourne.

Support Work can include help with daily routines, independence, appointments, community access, social participation, personal goals, and everyday activities.

An NDIS Support Worker can help with daily living tasks, home routines, community access, appointments, outings, skill-building, confidence, and social participation.

The type of support depends on the participant’s goals, needs, and NDIS funding.

Yes. Support Work can help participants access the community, attend activities, join social events, build confidence, and participate in everyday community life.

NDIS explains that support workers can help participants attend social events and take part in activities that support community participation.

Yes. Support Work focuses on practical day-to-day support, routines, independence, and community access.

Allied Health Assistance focuses on therapy-related activities and skill-building under the guidance of allied health professionals.

Allied Health Assistance Questions

What does an Allied Health Assistant do?

An Allied Health Assistant supports participants with therapy-related activities, skill-building, routines, and everyday practice under the guidance of allied health professionals.

This may include practising communication activities, daily living skills, regulation strategies, movement-based activities, or other goals recommended by an allied health professional.

These terms are often used in a similar way. An Allied Health Assistant may help participants practise therapy-related activities under the direction of an allied health professional.

The NDIS Quality and Safeguards Commission explains that allied health assistants work under the direction of allied health professionals to support participants to implement support plans.

No. An Allied Health Assistant is not the same as a therapist.

Therapists and allied health professionals are responsible for assessment, diagnosis, clinical planning, and professional recommendations. Allied Health Assistants help participants practise guided activities and build skills under professional direction.

Yes. Where needed, we can work alongside occupational therapists, speech therapists, physiotherapists, support coordinators, families, and carers to help participants receive consistent support.

NDIS Funding Questions

Can NDIS fund Allied Health Assistance?

NDIS funding may be used for supports that are reasonable and necessary and connected to the participant’s goals and plan. Allied Health Assistance may be suitable when it supports therapy-related goals under professional guidance.

Participants should check their NDIS plan, funding category, and plan manager or support coordinator before booking support.

Yes, Support Work may be funded under NDIS when it relates to the participant’s goals, support needs, and funding. NDIS support workers can help participants build skills, access the community, and work towards their goals.

Yes. We can support self-managed and plan-managed NDIS participants.

For NDIA-managed participants, provider registration requirements may apply depending on the support and funding arrangement. NDIS notes that some supports must be delivered by registered providers, including supports for participants with NDIA-managed funding.

Children and Adult Support Questions

Do you support children?

Yes. We support children with routines, confidence, social participation, community access, independence-building, and therapy-related activities under allied health guidance.

Yes. We can support children with autism, developmental delays, and other support needs, depending on their goals, routines, NDIS plan, and required level of support.

Yes. We support adults with daily routines, independence, community participation, appointments, confidence-building, and therapy-related activities where appropriate.

Yes. Adults can receive both Allied Health Assistance and Support Work if both services suit their goals, support needs, and NDIS plan.

Community and In Home Support Questions

What is community participation support?

Community participation support helps participants access social, recreational, and everyday community activities. This may include outings, appointments, social groups, hobbies, shopping, or building confidence in public settings.

We provide NDIS Support Work and Allied Health Assistance across South East Melbourne, including Cranbourne, Cranbourne South, Berwick, Clyde, Narre Warren, Dandenong, Frankston, Pakenham, and surrounding suburbs.

Yes. Support can take place at home, in the community, or in other suitable everyday environments depending on the participant’s goals and support needs.

Referral Questions

Who can make a referral?

Referrals can be made by support coordinators, therapists, families, carers, plan managers or participants.

A referral should include the participant’s name, contact details, age, suburb, NDIS plan management type, support needs, goals, preferred days or times, and any relevant therapy or support information.

You can contact All For You Therapy to discuss the participant’s goals, support needs, NDIS funding, and preferred type of support. From there, we can explain the next steps and confirm whether the service is suitable.

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Ready to Ask a Question or Make a Referral?

Whether you are a participant, parent, support coordinator or therapist, All For You Therapy can help you understand the next step.