Psychosocial disability refers to disability that arises from the impact of mental illness — the functional limitations that affect a person's ability to participate in daily life, relationships, work, and community. Approximately 690,000 Australians experience psychosocial disability, making it the most common form of disability. The National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS) funds supports for many people with psychosocial disability, but gaps remain significant — particularly for people who are ineligible for NDIS or who need community-based, peer-led, recovery-oriented support. Grant funding fills critical gaps in the psychosocial disability support system.
Scale
What psychosocial disability looks like
Psychosocial disability is not the same as mental illness — it's about the functional impact:
- Difficulty managing daily tasks (hygiene, cooking, managing finances)
- Limited capacity for work or study
- Social isolation and withdrawal
- Difficulty maintaining housing
- Navigating complex systems (health, Centrelink, housing)
- Episodic capacity — functioning varies significantly day to day
The recovery framework
Modern psychosocial disability support is guided by recovery principles:
- Recovery is personal and self-defined
- Focus on building a life worth living, not just symptom reduction
- Agency and self-determination are central
- Peer experience (lived experience of mental illness) is a valuable asset
NDIS (National Disability Insurance Scheme)
Mental Health Community Support Services (MHCSS) — Victoria
State-funded community mental health support — now transitioning with NDIS changes.
PHN (Primary Health Networks)
Commission psychosocial support services for people not eligible or not yet in NDIS.
Head to Health
Primary care mental health services — some access for psychosocial disability.
Mental Health Australia
National peak body — advocacy and policy.
SANE Australia
Psychosocial disability community, resources, and helpline.
Wellways
Community mental health and psychosocial disability support.
Flourish Australia
Psychosocial disability support services.
ARAFMI
Carers of people with mental illness.
The Loti and Victor Smorgon Fund
Mental health.
Various mental health foundations
Many state-based mental health foundations fund psychosocial disability programmes.
NDIS support coordination
Community participation
Peer support
Housing support
Employment support
Daily living skills
Family and carer support
Physical health
Crisis support
Cultural psychosocial support
Despite NDIS, significant gaps in psychosocial disability support remain:
- People who don't meet NDIS thresholds but still need support
- The complex application process (many give up)
- NDIS plans that don't reflect actual needs
- Gaps between discharge from hospital and NDIS-funded support
- Shortage of NDIS-registered providers with psychosocial expertise
Philanthropic funding for psychosocial supports outside NDIS — or for helping people access NDIS — addresses these gaps.
Lived experience workforce
The recovery framework prioritises people with lived experience of mental illness as support workers, peer support workers, and in leadership. Applications that centre peer workforce are well-aligned with the evidence and the values of psychosocial disability support.
NDIS navigation
Many people with psychosocial disability struggle to access NDIS. Applications that support NDIS access — through advocacy, plan preparation, or support coordination — address a genuine bottleneck.
Housing integration
Housing is foundational for psychosocial recovery — without stable housing, all other supports struggle. Applications linking psychosocial support with housing are more comprehensive.
Episodic capacity
Psychosocial disability is often episodic — people have good and difficult periods. Applications designed to support people across these periods (not just in crisis) are more aligned with recovery principles.
Tahua's grants management platform supports psychosocial disability funders and community mental health organisations — with participant outcome tracking, NDIS funding data, recovery journey measurement, and the reporting tools that help psychosocial disability funders demonstrate their investment in recovery and community participation.