“In-home nursing for Parkinson's disease across Sydney provides personalised support for people living with Parkinson's — careful medication timing (which matters more in Parkinson's than almost any other condition), falls prevention, swallowing safety, and help managing both motor and non-motor symptoms — coordinated with Sydney movement disorder clinics at RPA, RNSH, and other tertiary services.”
Parkinson's is more than the tremor it's often associated with — it's a complex condition where medication timing, falls risk, swallowing, sleep, and mood all matter together. Our in-home nursing and personal care across Sydney supports people living with Parkinson's and their families, working alongside movement disorder specialists at RPA, Royal North Shore, and other Sydney teams.
Quick facts
Citable facts for people living with Parkinson's, families, aged care assessors, neurologists, and Parkinson's NSW coordinators arranging in-home support.
Parkinson's home care helps anyone who's finding daily routines harder, and the families supporting them.
We tailor care to where Parkinson's sits in someone's life — early independence support, mid-stage daily help, or advanced complex care.
Support with the exacting Parkinson's medication schedule — getting doses on time matters because being late can trigger 'off' periods, falls, and swallowing risk. We work from the neurologist's plan and don't adjust without consultation.
Practical home assessments for thresholds, rugs, bathroom transfers, and mobility aids — falls are the leading cause of injury and hospital admission in Parkinson's.
Support at mealtimes for safe swallowing, modified diet implementation per speech pathologist's plan, and monitoring for aspiration signs.
Gentle assistance with bathing, dressing, grooming, and toileting — timed around the person's 'on' periods wherever possible so they can do as much as they're able.
Watching for changes in sleep, mood, cognition, blood pressure, and continence — non-motor symptoms can affect quality of life as much as motor symptoms and often warrant specialist review.
Good Parkinson's care depends on consistency — the same nurses recognising someone's patterns over time.
Small caseload means the same experienced nurses get to know each person's medication response, 'on' and 'off' windows, and what's a bad day versus a real change.
We work from neurologist and movement disorder clinic plans, document changes that matter, and communicate with treating teams so reviews are well-informed.
Falls prevention runs through everything we do — from bathroom transfers to mobility aids to home environment changes.
For most people living with Parkinson's (usually 65+), funding comes through aged care packages such as Support at Home or CHSP. Veterans access DVA Community Nursing. Younger-onset Parkinson's (under 65 at first NDIS plan) is often funded under NDIS. Private fee-for-service is also an option, including as a top-up to funded care.
Yes. We work from the prescribing neurologist's medication plan and support people to take medications on schedule — which matters more in Parkinson's than almost any other condition because being late can trigger 'off' periods, falls, and swallowing risk. We don't adjust doses without the treating team.
Falls prevention runs through every visit — we look at the home environment (rugs, lighting, thresholds), support safe transfers and mobility, escort to higher-risk activities like bathing, and watch for signs that medication timing or 'off' periods are contributing to instability so the GP or neurologist can review.
Personalised clinical care tailored to your unique required outcomes.
Tell us about your situation — newly diagnosed, managing mid-stage Parkinson's, or supporting someone with advanced Parkinson's — and we'll talk through practical home care options.
No obligation. We'll acknowledge your message quickly and get back to you within 24 hours. We're here to listen and help.