Blogs

AAPi Update - Newsletter 13 May 2026

By Clementine West posted 2 days ago

  

The 2026 Federal Budget delivered relatively limited investment in mental health and psychology, despite ongoing high levels of psychological distress and growing barriers to affordable care across the community. While AAPi welcomes several targeted measures, including significant increases in DVA psychology fees, Thriving Kids, First Nations mental health initiatives, dementia supports, and women’s health investments, substantial gaps remain in broader access to affordable psychological care. 

A major focus of the Budget was continued NDIS reform, including changes to eligibility, planning, reassessment processes, and psychosocial supports. AAPi recognises the significant anxiety and uncertainty many participants, families, and psychologists are currently experiencing regarding the future direction of the scheme and will continue advocating strongly to protect access to psychology services. 

AAPi will continue engaging closely with government, departments, and sector stakeholders over the coming days as further details emerge.

Read AAPi’s Federal Budget analysis on our website for a detailed breakdown of the measures and their implications for psychologists, clients, and the broader mental health sector. 

AAPi continues to undertake extensive advocacy work regarding the rollout of the national Thriving Kids initiative, with a strong focus on protecting the role of psychologists, ensuring access for children and families, and advocating for the inclusion of private practice psychologists in service delivery models. 

While Thriving Kids was initially discussed as a more nationally consistent reform, the reality has become increasingly fragmented, with each state and territory rapidly developing its own approach, procurement processes, and service models. This has resulted in significant variability across jurisdictions and raised serious concerns about consistency, workforce planning, evidence-based implementation, and equitable access for families, particularly those living near state borders. 

AAPi has been actively engaging with governments, departments, and stakeholders across multiple jurisdictions to advocate for:

  • The central role of psychologists in early intervention supports
  • Inclusion of private practice psychologists alongside NGOs and government services
  • Sustainable workforce models that do not undermine quality or accessibility
  • Evidence-informed implementation and evaluation frameworks
  • Fair and workable commissioning approaches

We remain concerned that rushed commissioning processes may result in governments defaulting to large NGO providers, potentially creating market concentration, workforce instability, and reduced choice for families. We have consistently highlighted the risks of highly KPI-driven, low-cost contracting approaches that can lead to workforce burnout and poorer long-term outcomes for children and families. 

We also want to acknowledge just how much anxiety and apprehension currently exists across the profession and the community regarding Thriving Kids.

Many psychologists are concerned about what these reforms may mean for:

  • Their clients and continuity of care
  • Workforce sustainability
  • The future role of private practice
  • Service accessibility and quality
  • Funding arrangements and commissioning models
  • The rapid pace and lack of consistency across jurisdictions

At the same time, many families and clients are understandably worried about whether they will be able to continue accessing trusted supports and whether services will remain available in their local communities.

AAPi is hearing directly from members across the country who are feeling uncertain, overwhelmed, and frustrated by the pace at which these reforms are unfolding and the lack of clarity that persists. We are continuing to advocate strongly to ensure psychologists’ expertise is recognised and that children and families do not lose access to high-quality psychological support during this transition.

NSW – EOI Process Now Open

The NSW Thriving Kids Expression of Interest process has now commenced. 

The NSW procurement process will involve two stages:

  1. Expression of Interest (EOI)
  2. Request for Tender (RFT)

Organisations selected through the EOI process will be invited to progress to the RFT stage.

The EOI closes on 29 May 2026.

AAPi is continuing discussions with the NSW Government and has heard that the current preference is to work with not-for-profit organisations, although private providers may still be considered through the EOI process. We are strongly advocating for the inclusion of private providers and educating government about the critical role private practice psychologists already play in supporting children and families across NSW.

We encourage members and organisations who may be interested to carefully consider submitting an EOI before the closing date.

AAPi is also exploring “Plan B” approaches, including potential collaborations between private practices and not-for-profit organisations. As an organisation, AAPi itself is a not-for-profit and is actively investigating options that support both the profession and community access outcomes.

WA – Market Survey Extended

AAPi recently attended the WA Thriving Kids briefing, and it was very clear from the discussions and questions raised that workforce engagement is urgently needed.

The WA Government has extended the closing date for its market survey until 17 May 2026, and we strongly encourage WA members to participate. Feedback from psychologists will be critical in shaping how services are commissioned and delivered.

Of particular concern, presenters indicated there is currently very limited resourcing anticipated for individual therapy within the WA model. It also appears WA may adopt more traditional state government commissioning arrangements.

AAPi will continue advocating for:

  • Adequate funding for psychological intervention
  • Recognition of the importance of individual therapy
  • Sustainable workforce models
  • Inclusion of private practitioners within service delivery pathways

If you missed the WA briefing webinar, a recording will be uploaded to the government webpage.

Tasmania – Consultation Sessions Underway

The Tasmanian Government has commenced a series of consultation and engagement sessions across the state regarding the proposed Thriving Kids model.

AAPi will attend the virtual consultation session and will continue to engage with the Tasmanian Government, alongside all other state and territory governments, regarding the important role psychologists must play in the Thriving Kids implementation.

Tasmania’s consultation process includes both face-to-face and online engagement opportunities.

Find the dates and locations, and register here.

Summary

There are enormous implications for both psychologists and the children and families who will rely on these services. AAPi remains deeply engaged at both the national and jurisdictional levels to ensure psychology is not sidelined in these reforms.

We will provide further updates on Thriving Kids next week.

Members are also encouraged to review AAPi’s Federal Budget Summary for additional information regarding Thriving Kids funding and broader mental health and early intervention investment announcements.

Excitement is building as the AAPi 2026 National Conference program nears completion!

This year’s conference is shaping up to deliver a dynamic and refreshing experience, with an inspiring line-up of speakers and sessions designed to spark ideas, foster connection, and drive meaningful conversation. Stay tuned - the full program will be launching soon!

A limited number of partnership opportunities are also still available for organisations looking to be part of this flagship event. You can learn more about partnership opportunities here.

Take advantage of Early Bird registration today, and join us for what is set to be one of the most memorable conferences yet!

Rural Australians Left Behind in Mental Healthcare Access

AAPi Executive Director Tegan Carrison was featured in an article by The Medical Republic examining concerns about Medicare access in rural and regional Australia. In the piece, Tegan emphasised that people living in rural, regional and remote communities should have equitable access to mental healthcare, reiterating AAPi’s longstanding call for stronger incentives to attract and retain psychologists in under-served areas. “Your postcode shouldn’t determine if you can receive the essential healthcare you need, whether it’s physical or mental healthcare.”

The AAPi Recommended Fees Guide for psychologists has been updated for the 2026-2027 financial year.

Did you know that Allied Health Professions Australia (AHPA) has a Digital Digest to help allied health professionals stay informed? These short practical digital health updates don't run to a schedule so if you subscribe, you'll only hear from them when it's useful and important information.  

Digital health tools are becoming part of everyday practice and it's important to stay up to date and keep your information secure, this makes it easy. 

Subscribe to the AHPA Digital Digest or access past editions of the digest here

Questions about My Health Record are becoming more common in clinical conversations. Taking a few minutes to log in and review your own record can help you better understand what clients may see, how information is shared, and how documents like pathology, imaging, and discharge summaries appear.

It’s a simple way to build your confidence in supporting conversations around coordinated care and information sharing.

Explore your My Health Record here.

AAPi has a range of interest groups members can join via the community forum.

Some of our newest groups to explore include:

Or, click here to explore all groups.

Whether you’re offering, or seeking, psychology-related products and services - the AAPi Marketplace brings it all together in one place, with listings covering the following categories:

  • Community or consulting services
  • CPD and events
  • Grants, scholarships and tenders
  • Materials/Resources 
  • Mentoring and supervision
  • Real estate and room rental 
  • Research 
  • Technology solutions

Explore the AAPi Marketplace today.

Healthy Men Community Conversations Launched

The Australian Government has launched the National Healthy Men Community Conversations project, a new initiative aimed at supporting the mental, physical and social wellbeing of men and boys across Australia. Led by Assistant Minister Ged Kearney and Special Envoy for Men’s Health Dan Repacholi, the project will bring communities, health organisations and violence prevention services together to encourage help-seeking, strengthen social connection, and promote respectful relationships. Insights from the conversations will help inform future government policies and programs focused on improving outcomes for men and boys.

0 comments
5 views

Permalink