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Healthroos – NDIS Mobile Physio and OT

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Mobile allied health · Homebush 2140

NDIS Physio, OT & Exercise Physiology in Homebush

Professional mobile allied health support for NDIS and Support at Home clients in Homebush. Our clinicians can visit at home, supported accommodation or an appropriate community setting, subject to current availability.

Registered NDIS providerHome visitsStrathfield Council

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Mobile allied health in Homebush

Coordinated care, close to home.

Mobile Physiotherapy, Occupational Therapy and Exercise Physiology for NDIS and Support at Home clients in Homebush.

Allied health delivered where life happens

Three disciplines. One practical, coordinated approach.

Homebush mobile allied health referrals are triaged from the participant’s current function and the decision they want help with. NDIS and Support at Home enquiries are considered within the applicable plan, clinical scope and current service capacity.

Illustration representing strength and mobility physiotherapy

NDIS Physiotherapy in Homebush

Homebush Physiotherapy may assess a change in walking, balance, transfers, movement or pain when routine allied health review is appropriate. State the previous and current method, aid, physical help, symptoms, recent incidents and active precautions. The physiotherapist determines the assessment and recommendations rather than assuming an exercise program is the first response. Compare the Homebush participant’s current function with their own earlier baseline and state the change they want reviewed.

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Wheelchair representing occupational therapy and assistive technology

NDIS Occupational Therapy in Homebush

Occupational Therapy may review how the Homebush change affects one daily activity such as personal care, dressing, meal preparation or use of existing equipment. Describe the task sequence, present support and participant preference. Equipment, environmental changes and funding outcomes are not selected from the referral alone. Record the exact task for OT, the help presently given and what the participant would prefer to do differently.

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Older adults taking part in an exercise physiology program

NDIS Exercise Physiology in Homebush

Exercise Physiology may support a Homebush capacity or activity goal after immediate clinical concerns are clarified. Include current activity, relevant health guidance, symptom response, recovery and realistic opportunities to practise. Program content and progression follow individual review. Provide the full visit address and only the practical entry details required to reach the agreed setting.

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Local coverage

Mobile allied health in Homebush and nearby inner Sydney communities

Homebush, postcode 2140, is included in Healthroos’ Strathfield Council mobile service area. A Homebush referral about a recent change in walking, transfers or daily function should explain what the person could do before, what is different now and whether medical review has already occurred. Healthroos is a routine mobile allied health service, not an urgent response service. New severe symptoms, an acute injury or an immediate safety concern need the appropriate medical pathway. When the referral is suitable for routine review, Physiotherapy may examine movement, aid use and assistance; Occupational Therapy may examine how the change affects a specific daily activity; and Exercise Physiology may address a later capacity goal when relevant health guidance and a stable baseline are available. The participant’s priority, consent and funding pathway remain central. Include the exact Homebush address, the setting in which the relevant task occurs, entry instructions needed for the clinician and the name of a person who may clarify access. Access details do not authorise that person to receive clinical information. Healthroos reviews scope, the requested discipline and current clinician capacity before offering an appointment.

  • Visits at home or supported accommodation
  • Community, recreation or gym settings when appropriate
  • Coordination with participants, families and support coordinators
  • Availability confirmed after referral review

Prepare a clear Homebush referral

Describe the change, the current risk and the question for allied health

A concise current-state brief helps Healthroos identify the right discipline and whether routine mobile care is appropriate.

Compare function

Explain what the participant could do before, what they do now, the assistance used and what matters most to them.

Include relevant guidance

Supply active precautions, recent clinical advice and any follow-up already arranged without sending unrelated records.

Confirm the visit details

Give the complete address, agreed setting, entry instructions, participant consent and the access contact's limited role.

Example: refer a new transfer difficulty without assuming the solution

A Homebush NDIS participant may now need hands-on help to rise from a chair that they previously used with an aid. The referral can compare the two methods, note pain or other symptoms, identify medical follow-up and state the participant's priority. Physiotherapy may assess movement and assistance. If seating setup or the surrounding daily routine creates a separate question, OT may be considered. Exercise Physiology is not added automatically while the immediate change remains unresolved. The referrer also supplies the exact address, entry instructions and consent for any supporter who will attend.

  • Previous and current transfer method, aid and assistance
  • Symptoms, incidents, active precautions and relevant follow-up
  • Participant goal, funding pathway, full address and authorised attendance roles

A Homebush address and referral do not guarantee acceptance, appointment timing, a particular discipline or a clinical outcome.

Choose the right pathway

NDIS and Support at Home referrals in Homebush

For NDIS participants

Healthroos is a registered NDIS provider. We accept referrals from participants, families and support coordinators for mobile Physio, OT and Exercise Physiology.

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For Support at Home clients

Mobile allied health may be arranged when approved as a clinical support under Support at Home. The service must be included in the person’s support plan and funded from the available budget; current contribution rules apply no participant contribution to clinical supports.

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A clear referral process

From referral to the first visit

01 · Refer

Tell us the requested discipline, goals, funding pathway and preferred visit location.

02 · Review

We review the Homebush functional change, medical follow-up or active precautions, requested discipline, visit setting, entry instructions, consent, funding and current clinician capacity.

03 · Arrange

If we can support the referral, the team confirms the appointment setting and next steps.

Homebush FAQs

Questions about mobile allied health

Can Healthroos review a recent mobility change in Homebush?

A routine Physiotherapy referral may be considered when the previous and current function, symptoms, aid, assistance, medical follow-up, consent and funding pathway are supplied. Urgent concerns need the appropriate medical response.

When is OT relevant to a Homebush transfer referral?

OT may be relevant when the daily activity, seating, equipment, support method or environment creates a separate occupational question. Describe that question rather than requesting a predetermined item.

What access information should I provide for a Homebush visit?

Provide the complete address, agreed setting, entry instructions and an access contact if needed. State separately who may attend and who may receive clinical information.

How do I make a referral from Homebush?

Use the Healthroos referral pathway or call 0468 333 813. Include the requested discipline, goals, funding pathway and preferred visit setting.

Discuss a referral in Homebush

Call 0468 333 813 or send a referral online. We will confirm service fit and clinician availability before arranging the first visit.