Showing posts with label NDIS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NDIS. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 11, 2023

The Evolution of Customised Employment and the Influence of the NDIS on Customised Employment Practice in Australia

Peter Smith 
Centre for Disability Employment Research and Practice 
Abstract
Introduction: The New Directions Report (1985) established open employment for persons with a disability as a goal of disability service systems in Australia. Customised Employment is an emerging employment strategy that supports people with complex disabilities to find and obtain employment, while supporting Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, Article 27 principles.
Aims: This paper examined the origins and evidence for Customised Employment since the passing of the National Disability Insurance Scheme Act 2013 and the impact of the NDIS on open employment practice underpinned by Customised Employment.
Method: A literature search of peer-reviewed papers was undertaken using the EBSCO database. This was followed by a review of journals that focused on disability employment. A search of grey literature limited to studies and reports of Australian-based employment was conducted to ensure that all available data was captured. Sixty-seven peer-reviewed papers met the criteria, while only six papers met the criteria within the grey literature search.
Results: The literature supporting Customised Employment and Discovery highlights the work of academics and practitioners in developing the evidence base for practice. While the descriptive studies highlighted the effectiveness of Customised Employment, they failed to meet the threshold for empirical evidence, highlighting the need for a random control trial or correlation studies.
Conclusion: Customised employment is an emerging employment model with promising results that have yet to meet the threshold for evidence-based practice. While the NDIS supports Customised Employment through capacity building and school leaver transition funds, research funding is needed to ensure that it is applied with fidelity to the existing and emerging evidence

Keywords: Customised Employment, NDIS, person-centred practice, discovery, fidelity

Tuesday, June 20, 2023

Measuring the impact of employment on persons with a disability as a means of improving the quality of employment outcomes

Peter Smith
Centre for Disability Employment Research and Practice
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9888-8113

Trevor R. Parmenter
Centre for Disability Studies, Sydney Medical School, University of Sydney
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8297-8488


https://doi.org/10.33700/jhrs.2.1.61

ABSTRACT

Aim: Current measures for disability employment focus on system outputs, not individual outcomes. This paper proposes an employment outcome measurement approach based on social quality theory as a means of improving the quality of employment outcomes for individuals.
Introduction: There is a paucity of government policies that promote practices which address the measurement of employment outcomes that reflect the goals of the individual. While there has been a recent trend towards a focus on quality of life as an outcome, process measurement and compliance to procedural regulations are still dominant.
Method: A scoping review of disability employment research from the year 2000 revealed only eleven papers which specifically addressed approaches to measuring disability employment outcomes at an individual impact level. Overall, the search failed to highlight any measure that focused on the impact of employment on the individual with existing measures focused on process measurement.
Conclusion: An outcomes-based approach, based on the four pillars of social quality theory, namely, social inclusion, social cohesion, self-determination, and social-economic security provide an opportunity to shift disability employment service provision towards individual outcomes rather than its existing focus on system outputs as a measure of success.

Keywords: meaningful employment, disability, Social Quality, NDIS, choice, control, individualized funding, outcomes, inclusion, cohesion, self-determination, practice

New Issue Published – Journal of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Volume 5, Issue 1 (2026)

Dear Colleagues, We are pleased to announce that today June 7th, the publication of the latest issue of the Journal of Health and Rehabilita...