Setting up govt disability support - advice needed pls
Hi all -
In favour of getting a diagnosis: like some of you, I struggled to admit that I had a disability, let alone needed help for it. But when I accepted my diagnoses (yes, plural. And yes, 'complex', going by my psychiatrist report) they set me free - free to make good and appropriate decisions regarding my health and wellbeing. Permission to not beat myself up because I realised that it wasn't that I was lazy or not trying hard enough. And freedom to finally accept myself as I was, not as who I or others wanted me to be.
One additional advantage of a diagnosis is that if you give it to the government, they will sometimes help! Which is what has somehow happened to me.
So my question to you, worthy fellow ASDers, is how do I help the government help me? I've been accepted on the NDIS, which is the Australian government disability support program. I have my first program planning meeting with an NDIS disability representative coming up in a few days. I'll need to outline my goals and needs with them. Any tips for navigating the labyrinth that is the NDIS (or similar in your country)?
Many thanks,
CS
_________________
I may not fit in everywhere, but where it counts, I belong.
I am sorry that you never got a response to this.
I have attempted to post similar to wrongplanet.net in the past, and have had zero responses.
I think a lot of it comes down to the fact that so much of the members are based in the states, where they have very little in regards to social safety nets, and little exposure to people outside of the states.
I am an Irishman, that lives in Norway, and I am coming to terms with the Norwegian system.
I have received my diagnosis in February, and I would say only really in the last couple of weeks have I started to accept it.
It is with that acceptance, that I started to look into what is needed to manage the disorder, just as you have.
What I would say is, that it sounds like a good first step, to get yourself registered with the disability support program.
I would really say that all the systems are likely to be different, and it depends on what NDIS can offer you, but discussing a plan with them will likely reveal what they have to offer.
As for me, in Norway, they will not express that I even have a disability, and they haven't provided any support outside of a diagnosis. It is only after I have started to research the supports needed for ASD, did I realize that there is a lot of work to do. I will meet with my doctor next week, to confront them on the situation, because I would really appreciate having a disability representative to talk to, so I can understand the plan going forward. Right now, I have never little hope.
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