Support Clusters Definitions and Pricing for
Tasmania

Valid from: Monday, 1 December 2014

Version release date: Wednesday, 19 November 2014

For the latest version of this document, or to provide feedback, please contact the Provider Support team at

Contents

Introduction 7

Definition of terms 7

Information applicable to entire Price List 8

GST 8

Remote and very remote loading 8

Provider travel to provide a support 8

Provider travel for purposes of training or accompanying a participant to travel 9

Rural and remote travel 9

Transport of participants 10

Equipment 10

Personal supports and training 12

Accommodation/tenancy assistance 12

Assistance in coordinating or managing life stages, transitions and supports 12

Assistance to access and maintain employment 14

Items related to work in an ADE 16

Assistance to integrate into school or other educational programs 17

Assistance with daily life tasks in a group or shared living arrangement 18

Assistance with daily personal activities 24

Assistance with travel/transport arrangements 27

Community nursing care for high care needs 28

Development of daily living and life skills 28

Interpreting and translation 30

Early intervention supports for early childhood 30

Management of funding for supports in a participant's plan 32

Household Tasks 33

Participation in community, social and civic activities 33

Physical wellbeing activities 38

Specialised assessment of skills, abilities and needs 39

Therapeutic supports 40

Training for independence in travel and transport 45

Behaviour support 46

Assistive products and equipment 47

Assistive technology specialist assessment, set up and training 47

Assistive equipment for recreation 49

Assistive products for household tasks 51

Assistive products for personal care and safety 52

Beds and pressure care mattresses and accessories 52

Continence related equipment 54

Equipment or aids for dressing or specialised clothing 57

Equipment for eating and drinking 57

Specialised household furniture 58

Bathroom and toilet equipment 60

Communication and information equipment 64

Assistive products for hearing 66

Assistive products for vision 68

Home modification design and construction 71

Personal mobility equipment 75

Transfer equipment 75

Prosthetics and orthotics 76

Equipment related to walking 79

Specialised seating for wheelchairs and other wheeled mobility equipment 80

Specialised strollers 81

Wheelchairs and scooters 82

Vehicle modifications 87

www.ndis.gov.au Tasmania Valid from: Monday, 1 December 2014 88

Introduction

The following price list has been developed by NDIA to help estimate and approve the cost of individualised plans. This price list contains information on maximum or benchmark prices of identified supports. Registered service providers with the NDIA have agreed to provide services at a cost that aligns with this list.

This list identifies 32 “clusters” or groupings of similar supports. Beneath each cluster are support items and detailed descriptions.

This price list is not a comprehensive list of all supports that may be provided in NDIS, but includes prices for the most commonly used supports.

Definition of terms

This price list includes the following terms:

Term / Definition
Support Item Ref No / This is the unique number that NDIA assigns to a particular support. In the case of some support items, for example assistive technology, the support item reference number includes the relevant code from ISO 9999.
UoM (Unit of Measure) / This indicates what the price covers e.g. per hour, per day, or each for goods.
Quote / Where Support Items cost $500 or less, a verbal or published price is enough.
For Support Items that cost between $500 and $10,000, an email outlining the cost is required.
For Support Items that will cost more than $10,000, a detailed written quote is necessary. In the latter case, competitive quotes will be sought form 2 or more suppliers.
Price / The Agency provides guidance on the price to be paid for each support item. For some items, such as personal care and community access, the price indicates the maximum that the Agency will pay for that item. For other items a quote is required and this is indicated in the “quote” column.

Planners should refer to the Guide to Understanding Funded Supports for further advice.

Information applicable to entire Price List

GST

Most items in this list are GST exempt as per the ATO information about GST and NDIS and the application of section 38-38 of the GST Act. For a small number of items where GST is applicable (for example delivery fees and taxi fares) the price is inclusive of GST.

Remote and very remote loading

For supports provided to participants in remote and very remote regions of Australia, the Independent Hospital Pricing Authority loading (remote 15%, very remote 21%) is applied to the unit price of the support.

Provider travel to provide a support

NDIA will no longer commit a separate dollar amount for funding in the plan for a provider travelling to provide a support. However, NDIA planners will consider provider travel for the adequate delivery of support in the decision about reasonable and necessary funding of supports.

Where the participant’s support is likely to be delivered by a support worker who needs to travel to a participant (either from the providers place of business or between one participant and the next) to deliver a support of less than four hours, the first hour of support will include an allowance for travel with forty minutes being for direct service delivery and the first twenty minutes of the hour allowed as travel. It is expected the outcomes required in the delivery of support will still be met.

NDIA does not separately include funding for travel related to:

·  The personal cost associated with a direct support worker travelling to and from their work (including if this is driving to or from a participant’s home)

·  Where a participant will receive their supports for over four hours in a single event of delivery of their supports

Travel costs are included in the cost quoted for a program of supports, such as trans-disciplinary early childhood intervention or assistance in shared living, and are not payable as additional items.

The travel position applies to supports such as assistance with daily activities, community participation, training and other like supports.

The travel position does not apply to travel related to therapeutic supports. In some cases the provision of therapeutic supports requires a provider to be engaged from outside the participant’s geographical area. This travel is paid at the hourly rate, up to a maximum of $1,000 per year, for return trips to visit participants at home/work/school beyond 10 kilometres.

Remote travel will be paid in accordance with the NDIS pricing information.

Provider travel for purposes of training or accompanying a participant to travel

NDIS encourages all participants to be as independent in traveling as is possible, and supports the inclusion of travel training in NDIS plans for the purpose of increasing the participant’s independence.

A provider may be funded to support a participant to meet their travel needs under the support cluster Assistance with transport arrangements. This cluster includes support items for:

·  implementing training in the use of public transport

·  accompanying the participant in the use of public transport

If, while providing supports in this cluster, a provider incurs costs for travelling with a participant on public transport, the NDIS will reimburse these costs in addition to the hourly rate.

All support for provider travel is to be approved as part of the participant’s plan.

Rural and remote travel

Services delivered by a provider located in a remote or very remote region attract the Independent Hospital Pricing Authority (IHPA) loading.

The Agency can come to an agreement with specific providers for special cases (one example is a metropolitan based provider that is required to provide support to a participant located more than 200 kilometres away).

No additional funding would be included where a participant lives in a rural community as the locational loading only applies for remote or very remote locations.

Transport of participants

Supports relating to transport are considered for funding when the support provided would generally:

·  only be available to participants who cannot use public transport without substantial difficulty due to their disability,

·  consider any relevant taxi subsidy schemes, and

·  not fund transport assistance for the participant’s carers to transport the participant for everyday commitments.

Where participant transport costs are included in a participant’s plan if their disability prevents use of public transport, informal supports are not accessible or available and their goals result in a need for assistance with transport that is higher than the expected levels of support funding for transport:

·  Taxi fare*

·  Per kilometre rate for a family member or carer using their own vehicle in place of other NDIS funded transport supports such as taxis. The current rate will be according to SCHADS/SACS Award (currently 78 cents per kilometre). This rate only applies for travel that is solely and directly related to the participant’s needs (i.e. the trip, or portion of the trip, would not be taken other than to transport the participant) and it does not apply to transport that family members or carers would be reasonably expected to provide to their family member.

·  Where a provider transports a participant in the course of providing their funded support NDIS will pay: the provider public transport fare where they accompany the person on public transport; or the rate according to SCHADS/SACS Award (currently 78 cents per kilometre) where they use the provider’s vehicle.

* Where the participant is eligible for a taxi voucher, NDIS will fund the portion of the fare that is not covered by the voucher.

·  All participant transport costs are to be approved as part of the participant plan, in accordance with the relevant operational guidelines.

Equipment

Equipment purchase prices are listed separately from equipment rental, repairs, maintenance or delivery costs. These are to be included as separate line items in the provider’s quote and the participant’s plan.

Cancellations and “no shows” of scheduled supports

Providers are to have business arrangements in place to minimise the risk of cancellation, no show or late change to a scheduled support. Service agreements between participants and providers should include details of these arrangements (including rescheduling the support) and advice periods for cancellations and changes to agreed appointments.

Where there is a specific risk that a participant will frequently “not show” for a support due to the nature of a person’s disability or the nature of the support, for example behaviour intervention supports the provider will have suitable individual specific arrangements in place to maximise the likelihood the person will receive all their required supports.

In relation to personal care, skill development or community access supports, if the participant, or their family or carer on their behalf, agree there was an unforeseen circumstance that resulted in a cancellation, no show or late change, a fee may be charged against a participant’s plan. Any fee that is charged to the participant’s plan will be according to the terms set out in the service agreement between the participant and the provider, up to a maximum of 8 instances per year.

Where a participant fails without notice to keep the scheduled arrangement for the support (a “no show”) the provider must make every effort to contact the participant to determine if there is an additional problem (e.g. the person has fallen out of bed and cannot raise an alarm, or the informal supporters are in crisis and additional support is likely to be required).

More than 8 instances of cancellation or no shows in a continuous 12 month period will be notified to the Agency contact person by the provider, so that consideration may be given to reviewing the participant plan.

No fee is payable by NDIS for a therapeutic or transport support that is not delivered; that is, there is no fee payable against the participant plan for a cancellation, no show or change to a scheduled support, regardless of the reason or the period of notice.

No payment may be claimed for a support delivered after the date of death of a participant.

No fee is payable by NDIS, or the participant, for cancellation by a provider or any failure to deliver the agreed supports.

NDIA does not permit collection of deposits, or money as a bond, from participants that a provider would retain in the event of cancellation of a support.

Personal supports and training

An asterisk (*) next to the cluster heading indicates that some support items in the cluster have been indexed from 1 December, 2014.

Accommodation/tenancy assistance*

Accommodation/tenancy assistance includes support for a participant to ensure that they obtain or retain appropriate accommodation. This can include guidance or undertaking work on a participant’s behalf.

Support Items / Support Item Ref No. / Description / UoM / Quote Required / Price /
assistance with accommodation and tenancy obligations / 01 001 / Support is provided to guide, prompt, or undertake activities to ensure the participant obtains/retains appropriate accommodation. May include assisting to apply for a rental tenancy or to undertake tenancy obligations. / Hour / N / $54.25
short term transitional support for accommodation / 01 003 / Transition to NDIS funding – payment of rent and utility accounts. Short term payment as per participant plan / Each / Y

Assistance in coordinating or managing life stages, transitions and supports*

This cluster includes short and long term supports that focus on strengthening the participant’s ability to coordinate their supports, and to assist them to live at home and participate in their community. This can include assisting the participant with:

·  Budgeting

·  Life planning

·  Parenting training

·  Resolving crisis situations

·  Developing capacity and resilience in the participants’ network

·  Co-ordinating complex supports

Complex supports co-ordination may be provided when:

·  there are multiple and intersecting mainstream, informal networks and funded services, and

·  the supports require regular active management and ongoing adjustment due to the participant’s regularly changing needs or