|
Day 1: Tuesday, 19 August 2008
Theme: Reflect, Review
|
8.00-9.00am
|
Registration and Coffee
|
|
9.00-9.15am
|
Video: 4 Corners
|
|
9.20-9.30am
|
Welcome: Jackie McRae, Family Member and Dr Bronwyn Morkham, National Director, Young People In Nursing Homes National Alliance
|
|
9.30-9.50am
|
Keynote address: Hon. Bill Shorten MP, Parliamentary Secretary For Disability and Children’s Services
|
|
10-10.30am
|
Concept Planning Session 1: Refining registration
Participants divided into 3 groups to refine statements submitted prior to the conference, during registration, with any additions.
|
|
10.30-11am
|
Morning Tea
|
|
11am-12.15pm
|
COAG YPIRAC initiative implementation: Concept and practice
Jurisdictional Teams Panel Discussion
Facilitator: Lindsay McMillan
Representatives from each of the state and territory implementation teams in discussion
|
|
12.15-1.30pm
|
LUNCH
Concept Planning Session 2:
12 nominees from each of 3 participant groups sort statement cards onto rating sheets
|
| 1.30-2.00pm |
KEYNOTE ADDRESS: Hon. Jenny Macklin MP, Minister for Families, Housing, Community Services and Indigenous Affairs |
|
2.05-3.15pm
|
COAG YPIRAC initiative implementation: show-casing achievements in years 1 and 2 - 3 Streams:
1. Accommodation Services for YPINH
Chair: Zoran Kobelev
This session showcases new accommodation support services developed through the COAG initiative. These services began in very different ways and have different target groups, The session will explore the realities of implementation and imperatives for the next few years.
Presenters:
- Tim O’Maley Wesley Mission Brisbane Youngcare Apartments
- Dr Bronwyn Morkham, YPINH National Alliance for St John’s Community Care
- John Fay, General Manager Community Services, Scope
2. Assessment, Aspirations and Advocacy
Chair: Sue Hodgson
The needs of the YPINH group were relatively unknown at the start of the initiative, and the first task in many jurisdictions was to undertake detailed assessments. This session will detail the findings from the assessment process in a number of States, discuss what emerged from the process and reflect on how it has gone overall.
Presenters:
- Di Winkler, Summer Foundation
- Jennifer Cullen, CEO, and Donna Engel, Manager YPIRAC Assessment and Options Team, Brain Injury Association Queensland,
- Chrissy Jamieson, Advocacy Tasmania
3. Meeting Individual Needs: how different approaches satisfy different needs
Chair: Leslee Hogan
One of the main challenges facing the initiative was to meet the many and varied needs of the YPINH group; and to design & deliver services that were sensitive to individual and family choices. This session will hear family and professional presenters talk about responses to the individual needs of people in the YPINH target group, with an emphasis on staying in the community.
Presenters:
- Angela Stathopoulos & Malini Somalyi, Calvary Bethlehem Healthcare: doing diversions
- Sally Milne: Allegra's House
- Family members to be confirmed
|
|
3.15-3.45pm
|
Afternoon Tea
|
|
3.45-4.15pm
|
Concept planning: Session 3
Final rating for subgroup issues - 3 key issues identified to go forward.
|
|
4.30-5pm
|
Summing up and close
|
Day 2: Wednesday, 20 August
Theme: Visioning the Future
|
9.15am
|
Welcome back
|
|
9.20-9.35am
|
Plenary Report on previous Day One's concept planning results
Common and group specific themes: Roy Batterham, Plexus Consulting
|
|
9.35-10.00am
|
Keynote address: Victorian Minister for Community Services, Hon. Lisa Neville MP
|
|
10.05-11.00am
|
Where health meets disability: rehabilitation as key component of a lifetime care approach
Panel discussion with Janet Wagland, Brightwater Care Group WA; Jennifer Cullen, Brain Injury Association Queensland; Andrew Macready-Bryan, James Macready-Bryan Foundation.
Facilitator: Julie McCrossin
The goal COAG set for itself in the YPIRAC initiative is not one dimensional. The response required is broad and must include rehabilitation for recovery from injury and also for management of health issues over the life course. These speakers have had extensive experience in developing a rehabilitative approach that addresses these issues for young people with ABI, those from indigenous communities and also the crucial transition from acute care to the community. As service providers, Janet Wagland and Jennifer Cullen will speak about the different services their organisations have developed to respond to these needs. Andrew Macready Bryan has lived the non compensable journey and has attempted to buy the services his son has needed. Andrew will talk about the fact that money alone cannot deliver what is required and that systemic and policy change is crucial if we are to go forward.
|
|
10.30-11.00am
|
Morning Tea
|
|
11.30-12.30pm
|
Shaping the Future: Panel discussion with Julie McCrossin
Jackie McRae, family member; Janet Wagland, Brightwater Care Group; Joan Hughes Carers Australia; Jason Anderson; George Taleoporos, Coordinator, Youth Disability Advocacy Service; Bernice Daher, Spinal Cord Injuries Australia; Francene McCartin, my future my choice; Chris Cuff, Cuff and Associates (Actuaries); Karla Edridge, family member; Maree Dyson, Dyson Consulting Group; Bronwyn Morkham YPINH Alliance.
The COAG initiative was always conceived as a first step and mid way through the initiative’s ‘first phase’ we are now in a position to better know what young people with high and complex support needs require to have ‘lives worth living’ in the community. But can the service system respond?
This panel discussion brings together professionals and individuals with first hand experience of the crisis we face in service delivery in health, disability and aged care and the implications this has for us all. The panel will share their views on what is needed if Australians are to have a life time care and support system that can respond in a timely and effective manner and how this can be achieved.
|
|
12.30-1.30pm
|
Lunch
|
|
1.30-3.00pm
|
Under the microscope...
Service System Improvements: 3 Streams
1. Service Innovations:
Chair: Phillip Beddall
This session ranges over a number of topics relevant to the YPIRAC initiative. People with different disability types need specific and targeted approaches, and even within these groups individual and local solutions are required. These presentations talk about approaches for people with ABI and neurological conditions, and service development more generally, including linking health and disability services.
Presenters:
- The Property Group: Di Winkler, Summer Foundation and MIRVAC;
- Continuous Care Pilot: Deb Farrell, Ngaire Trainor, MS Society;
- Life after injury…rehab and recovery Bronwyn Harding, Slow To Recover Program,
2. Lifetime Care and Alternative Funding Solutions
Chair: Alan Blackwood
The imperative for the YPIRAC initiative is to manage the needs of the target group for a lifetime. The need for lifetime planning was highlighted in the recent Senate Inquiry into the CSTDA. This session will explore what Lifetime Support is, or can be, how it can work and how it needs to be funded.
Presenters:
- Maree Dyson, Consultant, NZ ACC;
- Chris Cuff, Cuff and Associates, Actuarial Consultants
3. Family Voices
Chair: Carol Franklin
This session ranges over a number of topics relevant to the YPRAC initiative from a consumer and family perspective. The role of family and individual choices will be covered, including the role of families in the YPRAC initiative. Each presentation takes a different tack in showing the need to involve families in service design and to support them effectively.
Presenters:
- Belinda Epstein Frisch, Lara Friedman, Family Advocacy
- Greta Parker, Brainlink
- Grayden and Laurelei Moore: the urgent need for a rehabilitation strategy
|
|
3.00-3.20pm
|
Afternoon Tea
|
|
3.20-4.00pm
|
Plenary and conference outcomes: Jackie McRae, Family member
|
|
4.00pm
|
Conference Close
|
|