“In-home nursing for cerebral palsy across Sydney provides personalised NDIS-funded support at every life stage — from school-age routines and complex clinical care (PEG feeding, catheter management, pressure care) to adult independent living and transition planning — working alongside the Sydney Children's Hospitals Network, Royal Rehab, and Cerebral Palsy Alliance.”
Cerebral palsy is a lifelong condition, and the right support changes through every stage of life. Our in-home nursing across Sydney supports NDIS participants with cerebral palsy and their families — coordinating with the Sydney Children's Hospitals Network (Westmead and Randwick), Royal Rehab transition clinics, and Cerebral Palsy Alliance — with a small consistent team that learns each person's communication, routines, and clinical needs.
Quick facts
Citable facts for NDIS participants with cerebral palsy, families, support coordinators, paediatric specialists, and Cerebral Palsy Alliance coordinators arranging in-home support.
Our CP support is for participants at every life stage — school-age, transition, and adult — and the families and care teams supporting them.
We tailor CP care to the participant's communication, mobility, and clinical needs, working from existing specialist plans.
Skilled help with bathing, dressing, grooming, toileting, transfers, and mealtimes — delivered at the participant's pace and according to the routines that work for them.
PEG site care, enteral feeding regimes, flushing, and tolerance monitoring delivered in line with dietitian and medical team instructions, including for participants needing overnight feeds.
Bowel program support, catheter management where used, and continence routines — supporting dignity and reducing complications.
Regular monitoring of pressure points, repositioning support, and early escalation of skin changes — particularly important for participants with limited mobility.
For participants with co-occurring epilepsy, our nurses are trained to recognise seizure activity, document accurately, and follow individual seizure management plans.
CP care benefits enormously from continuity — the same people learning communication, routines, and clinical baseline.
Small caseload means the same nurses learn each participant's communication, preferences, and clinical baseline. This is especially important for participants who can't easily re-explain routines to a new face.
We work with families, not just for them — partnering on routines, sharing knowledge, and offering meaningful respite that doesn't disrupt the household.
We support adolescents and adults through transition from paediatric to adult NDIS pathways — a stage when continuity often breaks and families feel left to navigate alone.
NDIS is the primary funding source for most people with cerebral palsy in Sydney. Older participants may use aged care packages alongside. Veterans access DVA Community Nursing where eligible, and private fee-for-service is also an option. We work with support coordinators and plan managers to scope plans appropriately.
Yes. Our team supports school-age NDIS participants with CP — typically focused on home routines (morning, after-school, evening, weekend) and clinical needs like PEG feeding, catheter management, or seizure-aware support. We coordinate with paediatric teams at the Sydney Children's Hospitals Network where relevant.
Yes. Transition is one of the moments when continuity often breaks for people with CP and their families. We can support before, during, and after transition — keeping the same nurses and routines while the broader plan changes around them.
Personalised clinical care tailored to your unique required outcomes.
Tell us about the participant and what stage of life they're at — school-age, transition, or adult — and we'll talk through what consistent in-home care could look like.
No obligation. We'll acknowledge your message quickly and get back to you within 24 hours. We're here to listen and help.