Australian Government seeks to slash Medicare rebates for OT and Social Work
The Australian government is set to slash Medicare rebates for Occupational Therapy and Social Work under Mental Health plans.
As a person with autism, learning disabilities and mental health issues from a background of abuse and homelessness, a lot of my skills took years to acquire. I had had a lifetime of labels, Psych and Guidance, medicated by age 9, psychiatry since my teens. But it was a social worker who liased with my psychiatrist to get me – relatively illiterate, innumerate, itinerant and at risk – back into education. The psychiatrist took the credit but it was there I understood the very different jobs these people had in the area of mental health. The psychiatrist could medicate me, but the Social Worker had a more powerful medicine – practical plans and support to change, to save, a life.
It took me from age 15 to my 20s to acquire many self help and hard won independence skills;
- how to reliably carry a house key and not lock myself out,
- how to drive and remember where I was going and what time it was,
- how to recognise which pieces of post were bills and how to pay them,
- how to manage phone conversations with agencies and services,
- how to shop and keep track of change, how to manage a payment card,
- how to prepare food into a meal, how to tell a friend from someone who would exploit or abuse me.
I became an author. It was one of those one in a million chance things. My book was a bestseller and I found myself able to buy my own house and had an income to support myself.
Not understanding the difference between being loved and being owned and controlled, a very clever person wangled their way into my life and house. He encouraged me to let him touch me, to marry him, to buy an isolated property and then and over the next two years progressively wore down my confidence in my hard won self help skills. Under the guise of ‘helping me’, ‘caring about me’, he took over the keys to the house, all the finances, the driving, the cooking, all phone conversations, all shopping, my credit card, vetted all my friends and supports until they dwindled to none and insisted I not even walk to the letter box alone. The day after the second wedding anniversary he announced he was now entitled to half of everything I owned and was leaving.
I had spent two years without practicing my self help skills. Agoraphobic, isolated, disoriented, I didn’t need a psychiatrist or medication. I needed practical hands on help in the home and the community to pattern me back into my life skills. That help came in the form of an Occupational Therapist. She helped me get back my strategies and the life skills these supported, helped me get my confidence back and helped me put supports in place for the things I needed help with. Within three months I was running my life as an independent adult, able to commute from home out into the community, even joining in community activities and looking after a cat. This is the sort of human story the Government seems to struggle to imagine. Yet it is the story of so many adults with special needs, those from backgrounds of trauma, homelessness, addiction, who don’t neatly fit the traditional ‘psychiatric patient’ box and who, from time to time, will need support to keep their lives on track or get them back on track. Many of those people will be unable to access services if Medicare cover for those services is slashed.
I became a a teacher, an autism consultant, a lecturer, and work with families and with adults with a range of abilities and disabilities, including co-morbid psychiatric issues. A percentage of my clients will access the services of Social Workers and Occupational Therapists because they require something more holistic, more practical than a medication review, medication or further scrutiny of their psychiatric symptoms. They require a hands on approach which looks at their life in the context of their community, their social networks, their personhood. Whilst we have Medicare funding for such people to see Social Workers and Occupational Therapists, such people have a far better chance at equality and an integrated place in the community. Social Workers and Occupational Therapists are trained to think and work holistically, to see beyond the labels, the ‘pathology’. Their service is designed to be humanising, egalitarian, to be an alternative to the ‘them’ and ‘us’ they may have found with Psychiatrists and psychologists.
People are not one size fits all. Our services should reflect that.
Do add your story, add your voice. This funding slash isn’t set in stone yet. The decision will be reviewed in December 2010. Write to your MP. Contact the federal health minister, Nicola Roxon, and tell her what you think!
Federal Health Minister, Nicola Roxon,
1 Thomas Holmes Street
Maribyrnong Vic 3032,ph 9317 7077.
or email her your experiences and feelings on the matter
nicola@nicolaroxonmp.com
Make your voice count.
Also 10,000 signatures is required to try and change this by December 2010. Please add yours. Can you help get signatures from friends, fellow spectrumites, local GP practices, your community? Here’s the petition.
Please print it out.
Once signed they need to all be sent to the address at the foot of the petition.
Thanks for giving a damn.
Donna Williams, BA Hons, Dip Ed.
Author, autism consultant and public speaker.
http://www.donnawilliams.net

[...] Nicola Roxon is cutting funding for are life saving services and are particularly relevant to those teens and adults with developmental disabilities who also have mental health problems whose complex needs cannot be adequately met by medication [...]
[...] these people get into jobs, to live independently or to understand how the world is working. As my own wife puts it: As a person with autism, learning disabilities and mental health issues from a background of abuse [...]
[...] When most people think of mental health they tend to think of psychologists or psychiatrists. But what do Social Workers and Occupational Therapists do in the mental health field? Can’t that all be covered by psychologists and psychiatrists? Find out before the government succeeds in cutting Medicare funding for OTs and Social Workers. [...]
[...] Dawn Jecks and Greens health spokesperson, Rachel Siewert have urged the Government to reconsider a decision to cut funding for social workers and occupational therapists from a major mental health program. Senator Siewert said the removal of more than one thousand [...]