Our Service

Nurse-Led Support for Complex and High-Intensity Needs

Blueblossom Health Services provides clinically governed disability support for participants who require more than standard care. Our services are built around safety, dignity, structure, communication and long-term independence.

We support participants with complex health needs, high-intensity supports, nurse-led home and living pathways, behaviour support implementation, personal care, community access, domestic assistance, capacity building and hospital discharge needs.

Everyday support becomes safer when it is guided by clinical understanding.

Nursing & Clinical Care

When care becomes complex, clinical oversight matters. Blueblossom Health Services provides nurse-led support for participants who require structured care planning, Complex behaviour support, health monitoring, medication support, wound care, continence support, and ongoing communication with families, Support Coordinators and health professionals.

Our Registered Nurse-led model helps identify changes early, guide support workers, improve documentation, and support safer care delivery in the community.

Supports may include
  • Registered Nurse assessments and care planning

  • Medication support and seizures management

  • Wound care, pressure area and skin integrity support

  • Continence assessments and support planning

  • Diabetes support and health observations

  • Care plan development and review

  • Ventilation Support and Palliative care.

Clinical oversight that helps keep support safer, clearer and more responsive.

Complex & High-Intensity Supports

Participants with complex and high-intensity needs require more than routine support. They need clear care plans, trained workers, risk awareness, documentation, communication and clinical oversight.

Blueblossom Health Services supports participants with complex health presentations, high-intensity daily support needs, changing risks, and support requirements that need careful planning and consistent delivery.

High-intensity daily personal activities are covered by supplementary NDIS Practice Standards, and providers registered for that support class must be assessed against relevant standards. The NDIS Commission also publishes high-intensity support skills descriptors that explain worker skills and knowledge linked to those supports.

Supports may include
  • Support worker guidance under clinical care plans

  • Health monitoring and risk identification

  • Medication-related support according to care plans

  • Complex behaviour support

  • Complex continence support

  • Complex wound support

  • Enteral feeding / PEG-related support where appropriate

  • Diabetes-related support and observations

  • Mobility, manual handling and transfer support

  • Documentation and escalation pathwayst

  • Stakeholder communication when risks changes

  • Support for participants with higher daily care needs

We support complexity with structure, skill and clinical awareness.

Nurse-Led Home & Living Supports

SIL | ILO | SDA | Respite

Blueblossom Health Services supports participants with home and living pathways designed around safety, choice, stability and independence. This may include Supported Independent Living, Individualised Living Options, Specialist Disability Accommodation and respite or short-term accommodation pathways.

Our nurse-led approach helps participants, families and Support Coordinators consider the person’s goals, daily support needs, health risks, behaviour support needs, informal supports, routines and long-term living outcomes.

We focus on creating living arrangements that feel safe, respectful and sustainable — not just placing someone into a house.

The NDIS uses “home and living” as the broader category for different living options and supports. SIL helps participants live as independently as possible while building skills; ILO helps participants make choices about where they live, who they live with and how they are supported; and SDA is housing for people with extreme functional impairment or very high support needs.

We support complexity with structure, skill and clinical awareness.
  • Supported Independent Living: daily personal support and supervision to help participants live as independently as possible and build skills. NDIS provider guidance describes SIL as personal support for people with higher support needs who need help at home across the day and night.

  • Individualised Living Options: support to explore where a participant lives, who they live with, and how they want to be supported. ILO can involve family, friends and community networks alongside paid supports.

  • Specialist Disability Accommodation: housing designed for people with extreme functional impairment or very high support needs. SDA is Specialist housing designed for participants with extreme functional impairment or very high support needs, helping them live more independently while allowing supports to be delivered safely.

  • Respite / Short-Term Accommodation: short-term support options that may assist participants and families during temporary support needs, breaks from informal supports, transitions, or changes in circumstances.

The right home and living support can create safety, stability and confidence — but it must be planned around the person, not the vacancy.

Behaviour Support Implementation

Blueblossom Health Services supports participants with behaviours of concern by working alongside behaviour practitioners, families, Support Coordinators and care teams to implement person-centred strategies with consistency and respect.

Our approach focuses on understanding triggers, maintaining predictable routines, reducing escalation, supporting dignity and creating calmer support environments.

Supports may include
  • Behaviour support plan implementation

  • Consistent staff approach and routines

  • Positive behaviour support strategies

  • Documentation and incident reporting

  • Stakeholder communication

  • Risk identification and escalation

  • Support with emotional regulation and daily structure

  • Reducing environmental triggers where possible

  • Promoting dignity, choice and safety

Calm, consistent support can create safer days and better outcomes.

Hospital Discharge & Transition Support

We focus on creating living arrangements that feel safe, respectful and sustainable — not just placing someone into a house.

Hospital discharge can be complex when a participant has reduced mobility, high support needs, health risks, behavioural concerns or limited informal support. Blueblossom Health Services can work with participants, families, Support Coordinators and hospital teams to help establish safe supports after discharge.

Our nurse-led model helps support care planning, risk identification, medication routines, personal care, accommodation pathways and ongoing monitoring during the transition period.

We support complexity with structure, skill and clinical awareness.
  • Pre-discharge communication with stakeholders

  • Nursing assessment and care planning

  • Post-discharge personal care and daily living support

  • Medication support and health monitoring routines

  • Home and living pathway support

  • Staff briefing and support plan implementation

  • Monitoring changes after discharge

  • Escalation if health or risk concerns arise

A safer transition starts with the right support plan.

Everyday Supports That Build Independence

Alongside our complex and high intensity supports, Blueblossom Health Services provides everyday disability supports that help participants live with greater dignity, confidence and stability.

Every support is delivered with the same Blueblossom standard: safety, respect, communication and clinical awareness.

Personal Care & Daily Living

We provide person-centred support with everyday personal care tasks while encouraging participants to remain as involved and independent as possible. Our approach focuses on dignity, privacy, choice, routine and safety.

For participants with complex health needs, personal care is also an opportunity to observe changes in wellbeing, mobility, skin condition, continence, fatigue, mood or other risks that may need early attention.

Supports may include
  • Showering, grooming, dressing and hygiene support

  • Toileting and continence routines

  • Meal preparation and eating support

  • Hydration prompts and nutrition support

  • Morning, evening and bedtime routines

  • Mobility assistance and safe transfers where required

  • Encouraging participation in personal routines

  • Monitoring and escalating changes in presentation

Support that protects dignity while building confidence.

Community Access & Social Support

We support participants to access the community in ways that feel safe, purposeful and aligned with their goals. This may include appointments, shopping, recreational interests, social activities, family visits, community programs or developing confidence in public settings.

Our focus is not simply transport or supervision. It is helping participants build routine, connection, confidence and choice.

Supports may include
  • Medical and allied health appointments

  • Shopping, errands and personal tasks

  • Social outings and recreational activities

  • Building confidence in public places

  • Developing social and communication skills

  • Supporting routine and positive engagement

  • Safe community participation for participants with higher support needs

  • Support to attend family or community events

Connection, confidence and community — at the participant’s pace..

Domestic Assistance

A clean, safe and organised home environment can make a major difference to wellbeing, routine and independence. We support participants with household tasks while encouraging involvement wherever possible, so domestic assistance can also become an opportunity for skill-building.

For participants in SIL or complex support environments, domestic assistance can support safety, infection control, comfort, dignity and predictable daily routines.

Supports may include
  • Cleaning and maintaining safe living areas

  • Laundry, linen changes and wardrobe organisation

  • Dishes, kitchen tidying and household routines

  • Meal preparation support

  • Food safety and hygiene prompt

  • Decluttering and maintaining safe walkways

  • Supporting participants to participate in household tasks

  • Routine-based support to reduce overwhelm and improve stability

A safer home environment supports a calmer, more independent life.

Independence & Capacity Building

Our supports are designed to build skills, not create unnecessary dependence. We work with participants to strengthen everyday routines, decision-making, communication, community participation and independent living skills.

The NDIS describes capacity building supports as supports that can help build living skills, increase independence, and support involvement in the community.

Supports may include
  • Building daily routines

  • Independent living skill development

  • Meal planning and shopping practice

  • Budgeting and household participation

  • Communication and decision-making confidence

  • Community participation goals

  • Using reminders, calendars and visual prompts

  • Working gradually toward participant-led independence

We support progress — not just maintenance.

Assessments & Care Planning

Strong support begins with a clear understanding of the participant’s needs, risks, routines, goals and environment. Our nurse-led assessments and care planning help ensure supports are structured, appropriate and responsive to change.

This is especially important for participants with complex health needs, continence needs, falls risk, medication support, behavioural support needs, high-intensity requirements or frequent changes in presentation.

Supports may include
  • Nurse-led care assessments

  • Risk identification and escalation planning

  • Personal care and daily living support planning

  • Continence, skin integrity and mobility considerations

  • Medication support and health monitoring guidance

  • Staff instructions and support worker guidance

  • Communication with families, Support Coordinators and clinicians

  • Review and adjustment of care needs over time

Clear plans create safer, more consistent support.