Skip to content
Disability, Government Federal

Days are numbered for Restrictive Practices

People with Disability Australia (PWDA) 2 mins read

PWDA welcomes today’s release of the Disability Royal Commission’s Research Report on eliminating restrictive practices. As a disability representative organisation of and for people with disability, we strongly believe that restrictive practices are discriminatory and must end. PWDA therefore urges the Disability Royal Commission to make this recommendation in their final report. 

“For too long, people with disability have experienced violent practices such as seclusion and restraint that is not only a traumatic violation of our human rights, but is also state-sanctioned within current state and territory laws,” said Nicole Lee, PWDA’s President. 

The Report, titled Restrictive Practices: A pathway to Elimination, acknowledges the past and present violence that people with disability face when subjected to restrictive practices and forced treatment, which aligns with the lived experience of people with disability. 

“The Report particularly highlights that restrictive practices create life-long trauma, a distrust in services, and have life-long impacts,” said Ms Lee. 

PWDA sees the Report’s eight-point plan as being a comprehensive first step. However, we need to turn aspiration into action. Two important and urgent areas for action are to abolish segregated, closed and involuntary treatment settings where restrictive practices are used. Secondly, PWDA supports the Report’s calls for acknowledging past wrongs and the introduction of a National Redress Scheme that supports people with disability who are past and present victim-survivors. 

As we await the Disability Royal Commission’s Final Report, and the Government’s response, we urge all levels of government to start working through how they will act to end and prevent contemporary forms of segregation and institutionalisation of people with disability. 

“Part of bringing deinstitutionalisation to reality is to unlock the doors on institutional settings, abolish forced treatment and stop separating us from our peers without disabilities – in schools, workplaces and the places we live and interact with the world around us,” said Ms Lee. “While we are locked behind closed doors, separated and segregated, a culture of silence, control and abuse continues.” 


About us:

People with Disability Australia Incorporated (PWDA) is a national disability rights and advocacy, non-profit, non-government organisation. We have a cross-disability focus, representing the interests of people with all kinds of disability and our membership is made up of people with disability and organisations mainly constituted by people with disability.


Contact details:

Lizzy Fowler, PWDA Media and Communications

[email protected]

0491 034 479

Media

More from this category

  • Government Federal, Oil Mining Resources
  • 19/12/2025
  • 12:08
Cement Concrete & Aggregates Australia

Productivity Commission Report Highlights Construction Materials Reform Opportunities

Key Facts: Productivity Commission's National Competition Policy report identifies construction and manufacturing as key reform priorities, highlighting issues with fragmented standards and inconsistent regulationReport calls for modernisation of standards and reduction of regulatory fragmentation to improve productivity and support decarbonisation in construction materials sectorCCAA supports Commission's recommendation to review mandatory standards relating to construction and waste reductionFocus on road user charging reform welcomed, given construction materials account for 39% of national road-freight tonnageReport advocates for nationally consistent regulatory approach focused on outcomes rather than inputs to reduce costs and encourage innovationCement Concrete & Aggregates Australia (CCAA) has welcomed the release…

  • Government Federal, Medical Health Aged Care
  • 18/12/2025
  • 10:20
Hepatitis Australia

Hepatitis Australia welcomes federal funding to continue progress toward eliminating viral hepatitis

Hepatitis Australia has today welcomed the Australian Government’s investment in viral hepatitis prevention, testing and treatment measures and community-led initiatives announced in the Mid-Year Economic and Fiscal Outlook (MYEFO). The national Hepatitis peak said that the additional funding comes at a critical moment in Australia’s push to eliminate hepatitis B and hepatitis C by 2030 and will help prevent avoidable illness, liver cancer and deaths. Hepatitis Australia CEO Lucy Clynes said that the MYEFO funding commitment demonstrated that the Australian Government recognises what is at stake. “This funding announcement is good news for nearly 300,000 Australians living with viral hepatitis,…

  • Government Federal, Mental Health
  • 17/12/2025
  • 17:05
Australians for Mental Health

Australians for Mental Health welcomes mental health spend in mid-year budget update

Australians for Mental Health welcomes mental health spend in mid-year budget update Australians for Mental Health has welcomed the federal government’s decision to fund its election commitment of more than $1 billion for mental health care. The Mid-Year Economic and Fiscal Outlook released today confirms the mental health funding boosts, which will expand services and provide a boost to the workforce. The funding includes $500 million spent on a new network for 20 Youth Specialist Care Centres, $267.3 million for 32 new and upgraded Medicare Mental Health Centres, $225.3 million for 58 new, upgraded or expanded Headspace services and $83.9…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.