Disability Health Support Australia

Disability Health Support Australia Providing support with assessment, planning, and delivery of Disability-Related Health Issues.

Let’s all be a little bit kinder
25/05/2025

Let’s all be a little bit kinder

My son Andrew will never get married. He won’t have children. He won’t drive a car or experience many of the milestones we take for granted.

But he is happy. And he is healthy.
And to me, that’s everything.

When a stranger gives him a smile, it lights up my entire day.
When a girl glances at him kindly, joy rushes through his whole body like a wave of sunshine.

It doesn’t take much to be deeply, profoundly human.

Let me tell you a story.

At a party held at a school for children with special needs, one father stood up to speak.
What he said stayed with everyone who heard it.

After thanking the staff who worked with such devotion, he paused and shared a reflection:

“When nothing disturbs the balance of nature, the natural order reveals itself in perfect harmony.”

Then his voice began to tremble.

“But my son Herbert doesn’t learn like other children. He doesn’t understand like they do.
So tell me… where is the natural order in his life?”

The room fell completely silent.

Then he continued:

“I believe that when a child like Herbert is born—with a physical or cognitive disability—the world is given a rare and sacred opportunity:
To reveal the very core of the human spirit.
And that spirit is revealed not through perfection—but in how we treat those who need us most.”

He shared a moment he would never forget:

One afternoon, he and Herbert were walking past a field where some boys were playing soccer.
Herbert looked longingly at them and asked:

“Dad… do you think they’ll let me play?”

The father’s heart sank. He knew the answer was likely no.
But he also knew—if they said yes—it could give his son something far more valuable than a goal: a sense of belonging.

So he gently approached one of the boys and asked:

“Would it be okay if Herbert joined the game?”

The boy looked over at his teammates, hesitated, then smiled:

“We’re losing 3–0 and there’s ten minutes left… Sure. Let him take a penalty.”

Herbert lit up.
He ran to the bench, put on a jersey that nearly swallowed him whole, and beamed with pride. His father stood at the sidelines, tears in his eyes.

He didn’t play much. He just stood nearby, watching. But something in the boys shifted.
They began to see him—not as a distraction, but as one of them.

And then, in the final minute, a miracle happened.
Herbert’s team was awarded a penalty kick.

The same boy turned to the father and gave a knowing nod:

“It’s his shot.”

Herbert walked slowly to the ball, nervous but radiant.

The goalkeeper caught on. He made a show of diving to the side, giving the boy a clear shot.
Herbert nudged the ball gently forward.
It rolled across the goal line.

Goal.

The boys erupted in cheers. They hoisted Herbert into the air like he’d won the World Cup.
They didn’t just let him play.
They let him belong.

The father closed his speech with tears falling freely:

“That day, a group of boys made a decision… not to win, but to be human.
To show the world what kindness, dignity, and love really look like.”

Herbert passed away that winter.
He never saw another summer.
But he never forgot the day he was a hero.

And his father never forgot the night he came home, telling the story as his wife held Herbert close, weeping—not from sorrow, but from joy.

A final thought:

Every day, we scroll past distractions—memes, jokes, quick laughs.
But when something truly meaningful crosses our path, we hesitate.

We wonder: Who would understand this?
Who should I send this to?

If someone sent you this story, it’s because they believe you’re one of those people.
That you see the heart in others.
That you understand what really matters.

Because each day, the world gives us countless chances to choose decency over indifference.

As one wise man said:

“A society is judged by how it treats its most vulnerable.”

14/03/2024

Autism in Māori is Takiwātanga it means in his/her own time and space 🧡
Orange Hearts for Autism Awareness. Thank you!! 🧡
🧡Perfectly normal🧡
🧡 Not Different, Just Unique🧡

30/11/2023

A su***de emergency hotline referred me a chap today. They felt he needed a patient advocate. I am not qualified to provide community based mental healthcare advocacy but there is one area where I might be able to help.

He is seeking a clinical psychologist with availability. He has a referral. He lives in Wesr Ryde.
He has a lengthy and complex history Including ptsd/complex trauma, depression and anxiety. He is 50 years old. His goal is to become well enough to get back into work before he deskills with the help of mental health services. He has a supportive GP. He does not accept that he is beyond help or beyond a useful life.

Can anyone direct me to a clinical psychologist who might be suitable? PM me please with names/suggestions.

🙏🙏 in advance.

It’s not ever day a patient advocate gets a glowing endorsement from The Lancet. Congratulations Ben Bravery.The Patient...
23/09/2023

It’s not ever day a patient advocate gets a glowing endorsement from The Lancet.

Congratulations Ben Bravery.

The Patient Doctor

When Ben Bravery was 28 years old, he was diagnosed with bowel cancer. Shortly after, he decided to become a doctor. The Patient Doctor is a memoir chronicling Bravery’s experience either side of the stethoscope, as first a patient under intense treatment, and then a doctor. Bravery’s recount crosses borders: from China to Australia; from patient to doctor; from zoology to medicine. His choice to become a doctor was based on his first-hand experiences as a patient and his treatment by doctors; not by how they treated him as a patient (“excellently”, he emphasises), but as a person. The Patient Doctor is both a plea and a study in the importance of “restoring humanity at the centre of healthcare”. The book starts with the diagnosis—an intimate moment shared between doctor and patient, with Bravery as the latter. He then takes us back to his time as a child and writes with candour and wit about his mother refusing to give him up for adoption and the father figure he saw in a close friend who was to become his “self-appointed dad”. We learn of his evolving love of zoology and his decision to move to China for research in his twenties—a decision that led him to his future wife, and his future diagnosis. It was there, in China, that Bravery opened up for the first time about certain symptoms that had been plaguing him for months. His symptoms were numerous and excruciating, but the “last thing [he expected] was cancer”. Fainting spells and paleness were put down to a dodgy stomach reacting to rich foods. Blood in the toilet was put down to haemorrhoids— at first—but when the volume increased, so did the overwhelming panic. Still, Bravery kept silent: “there is nothing sexy about diarrhoea, poo pain and bloody toilet paper”, he quips. It was while his “dad” was with him in China that Bravery opened up about what was happening to him for the first time, sharing the “secret” that he had kept within the confines of his bathroom. On a trip home to Australia weeks later, Ben relayed the same information to his mother who instinctively booked a colonoscopy. From there, things began to move very quickly. “The tumour had grown so big that it reached from inside the sigmoid through the bowel wall, and had attached itself to my re**um”, Bravery explains. The cancer was also close to his bladder and vas deferens and had spread to a seminal vesicle. This news was delivered by a kind and knowledgeable surgeon and followed swiftly by a three-point plan: chemotherapy, radiation, and surgery. “The surgeon explained it in terms of plumbing – the idea was to cut out the bit of pipe with the cancer in it and join the rest of the pipe back up.” After having his seminal vesicle, sigmoid colon, re**um, and part of his descending colon removed, Bravery was left with a temporary stoma bag. Bravery details his experiences during these few months with his cancer team in vivid detail but one event stands out in his mind. “We’re going to do scans and put small tattoos on you for radiation”, Bravery was told ahead of his treatment, but this statement in no way reflected what would happen next. Surrounded by a team of radiation therapists poking and tattooing him, in an ill-fitting hospital robe that was eventually discarded, Bravery felt naked and vulnerable. Making matters worse, one therapist suggested to “reach around, grab your sc***um from behind and pull down as hard as you can” to avoid radiation damage to his testicles. Bravery reflects on the “rawness” of that day, and his vulnerability in that position, surrounded by strangers, which he carried with him for a long time: “I was fearful I would end up being that exposed again”. This instance of dehumanisation, among others, fuelled Bravery’s decision to become a doctor. There was no “lightbulb” moment for Bravery, just a single thought while receiving chemotherapy one day: “I should become a doctor”. Cured of cancer but still receiving checkups, colonoscopies, and blood thinners for clots, Bravery decided to go to medical school regardless. “Remaining a patient would have been the easier thing to do”, he notes. The remainder of the memoir chronicles his time going through medical school and becoming a doctor. We stay with him on his rotations and observe the treatment of patients by their doctors. We become infuriated with the medics who do not even tell patients their names. Bravery is sincere, motivated, and enthusiastic when explaining why even the smallest things, such as name badges, can help to put humanity at the centre of hospitals, but other doctors are not so keen. More than once, Bravery witnesses patients’ confusion and anger when not understanding who they are talking to, as everyone—from doctors to orderlies— breeze into their rooms and leave again without greeting. Bravery asserts that patients are seen “less as people, more as a problem” to too many doctors. His experience is largely based on the Australian health-care system; however, these problems are global and not new: certain aspects of hospital politics are difficult to change, but the way patients and doctors communicate can be remedied. Since writing the book, Bravery remains working as a qualified doctor and hopes to specialise in psychiatry. In a recent update on social media, Bravery shared that a colonoscopy had found several new polyps, one of which had suspicious features. The description on his post encapsulates The Patient Doctor in just one sentence—“Always a patient, sometimes a doctor”—and it is exactly Bravery’s experience of both that makes his memoir a rare and crucial read.
Hollie Sherwood-Martin
www.thelancet.com

I am in disbelief that this has happened. What a very sad day for Australia
15/04/2023

I am in disbelief that this has happened. What a very sad day for Australia

We are beyond heartbroken today following the death of a paramedic while on duty in Campbelltown this morning.
Our thoughts are with his loved ones and colleagues, and we thank police and clinicians at Liverpool Hospital for their assistance.
Our paramedics serve the community on the frontline every day and we are extremely grateful for their dedicated service.

This is aweful! Truly aweful… so very devestating
15/04/2023

This is aweful! Truly aweful… so very devestating

THANK YOU: We have received thousands of messages of support from across Australia and the world following the death of paramedic Steve Tougher, and we are so deeply grateful for your love.
Thank you to every emergency services colleague, fellow health care worker or member of the public who took the time to comment here, send a message or write a letter.
Thank you also to those in the UK, Europe, Russia and Canada who sent their love and condolences.
The tears flowed across NSW Ambulance yesterday and the pain will be felt deeply for many, many years to come.
Our paramedics - and all first responders - put others first every day, bravely facing the unknown to care for the community.
We hold them close to our hearts today and always.
Thank you again for your support.

Come on people! Sort this out we desperately need these workers. Whilst I wholehearted agree an adequate screening must ...
07/02/2023

Come on people! Sort this out we desperately need these workers. Whilst I wholehearted agree an adequate screening must be done this is madness!

While most jurisdictions allow recruits to work while supervised until their screening process is complete, under Victorian law employees cannot begin their jobs while their application is processed.

The Government did a good thing a little while ago and increased the subsidised mental health sessions to 20 sessions pe...
03/01/2023

The Government did a good thing a little while ago and increased the subsidised mental health
sessions to 20 sessions per calandra year. They have now halved this back to 10. Removing a proven treatment option that is working for so many people is, quite simply, unacceptable.

The cuts delivered by Federal Health Minister Mark Butler ignored overall findings and recommendations in the Better Access Evaluation report.

Hello Brains Trust,I need your help please......I am looking for the following, for a client of mine who is trying to ga...
09/11/2022

Hello Brains Trust,

I need your help please......

I am looking for the following, for a client of mine who is trying to gain access to the NDIS.

1. An Occupational Therapist (OT), that would be able to perform a Functional Capacity Assessment and provide a report on their findings.

2. An Exercise Physiologist (EP), that would be able to perform an assessment and provide a report on their findings.

3. A Physiotherapist, that wold be able to perform an assessment and provide a report on their findings.

Some thing to consider:-
1. My client currently has a Chronic Health Care Management Plan and would like to utilise this to off set the funding necessary.
2. If possible and affordable, mobile practitioners would be highly regarded to provide these assessments.
3. An understanding of report writing for the NDIS would be an added bonus but not completely necessary as I would be happy to work in collaboration with you to make sure that it is suitable for NDIS submission.
4. My client is based in Hazelbrook, Blue Mountains, New South Wales 2779

Please if you are interested or know someone who is, DM me so that we can set up some time to talk.

Thank you in advance

Address

Sydney, NSW

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