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“A major red flag”: four in five warn Thriving Kids rollout is too rushed, national CYDA survey finds

Children and Young People with Disability Australia (CYDA) 3 mins read

A new national survey of 1535 families and young people has found nearly 80% believe the government’s Thriving Kids rollout window leaves too little time to prepare, putting vital supports at risk.

 

Conducted by Children and Young People with Disability Australia (CYDA) last month, the survey is the first significant community pulse check of its kind since Disability Minister Mark Butler announced Thriving Kids on 20 August. 

 

The program was billed as a targeted NDIS alternative for some children with developmental delay and autism under nine.

 

“It is a major red flag when a vast majority of people who will be impacted tell you your reform timetable is unrealistic and that it could cause real harm,” said CYDA CEO Skye Kakoschke-Moore.

 

“We have long called for alternative supports, but they need to be effective, properly co-designed with our community, and fully functional before they can replace the NDIS.

 

“Such significant reform cannot be achieved in under a year without risking children falling through the cracks and losing access to essential, life-changing supports completely.”

 

Thriving Kids is set to launch in July 2026, giving governments and providers just nine months to prepare. Access changes to the NDIS would then kick in from mid-2027.

 

Only four per cent of survey respondents felt this was sufficient time, while a majority believed it did not allow enough room for genuine consultation, a trial period, and amendments.

 

Many were concerned the initiative would not meet their needs or provide disability and neuroaffirming support, with more than 70% calling for guaranteed supports and the maintenance of some existing supports. 

 

“If the plan is to bring supports into the school environment, it is pretty much guaranteed the ones who need it most will slip through the cracks,” said one respondent.

 

Three in four (76%) young people, parents and caregivers were worried, while one in two (51%) were scared or confused by the initiative.

 

Others said they felt angry, powerless, and even suicidal. 

 

What should Thriving Kids look like?

 

CYDA’s survey included strong consensus about the types of support the initiative should include.

 

Occupational therapy (97%), speech therapy (96%), psychology (90%), physical therapy (86%) and parenting programs (79%) were the most common suggestions.

 

“Thriving Kids has the potential to be transformative for many families and children with disability, but it needs to be developed by and for them,” said Ms Kakoschke-Moore. 

 

“What was most apparent in our survey was a desire for the program to be tailored to individual needs, to be disability and neuro-affirming, and to provide real choice and control.”

 

In its submission to the Parliamentary Inquiry on Thriving Kids, which closed on Friday, CYDA, with the support of 14 other disability and peak organisations, called on the government to:

 

  • Guarantee no child will fall through the cracks in the support ecosystem
  • Provide adequate time for co-design and evidence-based supports
  • Build on and strengthen existing supports that work
  • Listen to what the community says is effective
  • Ensure independent oversight of new supports 

 

CYDA also sits on the government’s new Thriving Kids Advisory Group, which met for the first time last week.

 

Read CYDA’s full survey factsheet here.

 

The following individuals are available for interviews:

  • Skye Kakoschke-Moore – CYDA CEO
  • Survey respondents, including young people with disability and parents or caregivers

 

A note on survey data:

The figures provided as part of this release, and in the accompanying document, are preliminary data from CYDA’s Thriving Kids survey. The final analysis and full survey report will be officially released in the near future. 


About us:

Children and Young People with Disability Australia (CYDA) is a not-for-profit community organisation and the peak organisation representing the rights and interests of children and young people with disability (aged 0-25) in Australia.


Contact details:

Email: [email protected]
Phone: (03) 9417 1025
Mobile: (+61) 0426 815 627 (Media Advisor David Kavanagh)

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