Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and complex trauma affect hundreds of thousands of Australians across every sector of society — veterans returning from conflict, first responders after critical incidents, survivors of childhood abuse and domestic violence, communities affected by disasters, and many others. PTSD is treatable, yet services are inadequate for the scale of need. Grant funding supports research, treatment access, peer support, and the trauma-informed approaches that help Australian survivors recover.
Scale
Types of trauma and PTSD
Why PTSD is underfunded
Open Arms (DVA)
Veterans and Families Counselling — the primary government mental health service for veterans with PTSD:
- Counselling (individual and group)
- Peer support
- Residential treatment programmes
Department of Veterans' Affairs (DVA)
DVA funds veteran mental health including PTSD treatment, research, and advocacy.
NHMRC
Research grants for PTSD treatment efficacy, neurobiology, and prevention.
National Trauma Recovery Programmes
State-funded disaster recovery mental health services (activated after major disasters like bushfires, floods).
Blue Card / Police trauma services
State-funded trauma support for police and emergency services.
Phoenix Australia (National Centre of Excellence in Posttraumatic Mental Health)
Australia's peak PTSD research and training centre:
- Clinical guidelines
- Research grants
- Training for clinicians
- Resources for trauma survivors
Soldier On Australia
Veteran PTSD and wellbeing support — peer programmes, employment, and clinical services.
RSL (Returned & Services League)
Welfare support for veterans including PTSD — significant philanthropic funding.
Fortem Australia
Emergency services first responder mental health — PTSD support for police, fire, ambulance.
Rape and Domestic Violence Services Australia (RDVSA)
Trauma support for sexual violence and DV survivors.
Blue Knot Foundation
Complex trauma support — particularly childhood abuse survivors and their families.
Evidence-based treatment
Veteran PTSD
First responder mental health
Police, firefighters, paramedics, and ambulance workers:
- Post-critical incident support
- Peer support programmes (embedded peers)
- Confidential counselling (outside formal systems)
- Cultural change in mental health stigma within emergency services
Childhood and complex trauma
Sexual assault survivors
Disaster trauma
Post-disaster mental health:
- Psychological First Aid training
- Community-based recovery programmes
- Long-term trauma follow-up (most disaster mental health services stop too early)
- Rural community recovery
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander trauma
Intergenerational and historical trauma:
- Culturally grounded healing approaches
- Trauma-informed practice training
- Community-controlled healing programmes
- Stolen Generations survivor support
Trauma-informed care (systemic)
Training services and systems to recognise and respond to trauma:
- Healthcare provider training
- Child protection trauma-informed practice
- Schools (Trauma-Sensitive Schools)
- Housing services
- Criminal justice settings
Evidence base
Trauma treatment has a strong evidence base — TF-CBT, EMDR, PE, and CPT all have solid clinical trial evidence. Applications showing fidelity to evidence-based protocols are more compelling.
Veterans and first responders: cultural context
PTSD treatment for this population requires cultural sensitivity — many veterans and first responders will not engage with mainstream mental health services. Peer support, military-specific settings, and destigmatisation are critical.
Trauma-informed systems
Training systems (hospitals, schools, housing) in trauma-informed practice has population-level impact — every traumatised person in the system benefits. This systemic approach is highly cost-effective.
Aboriginal healing
Intergenerational trauma in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities requires culturally grounded healing — Western PTSD frameworks alone are insufficient. Applications supporting culturally grounded healing approaches are compelling.
Tahua's grants management platform supports mental health funders and trauma services — with programme participant tracking, clinical outcome measurement, trauma-informed service data, and the reporting tools that help trauma funders demonstrate their investment in recovery for PTSD survivors across Australia.