Support Network has been a highly efficient way to organise home care support services for my 86 year old father
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Gentle hands and clinical precision, healing wounds with care that speeds up recovery.
Never miss a dose, our nurses keep your medication routine safe, on time, and stress-free.
Smooth recovery starts here, skilled support that helps you heal stronger after surgery.
Relief that works, personalised care plans to keep pain under control, day and night.
Bringing hospital-level care to your home, because your health deserves the highest standard.
Effective, comfortable compression that promotes circulation and prevents complications.
Compassionate end-of-life support that puts comfort, dignity, and family first.
Thorough health checks at home, spotting concerns early and keeping care on track
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Support Network has been a highly efficient way to organise home care support services for my 86 year old father
The customer support team is incredibly responsive. They helped me navigate the platform and answered all my questions quickly.
My support worker goes above and beyond every single day. I never thought finding such dedicated help could be this easy
The fact that Support Network works seamlessly with NDIS is a huge plus. It’s made accessing support services so much more straightforward
It’s refreshing to find a platform that priorities both safety and quality. I wouldn’t go anywhere else for support services
Support Network connected me with a support worker who assists with everything from personal care to community engagement, making my daily life much more manageable.
Knowing that all support workers have undergone police and Working With Children Checks provided me with peace of mind when selecting care for my loved one.
Highly recommend, made finding the right support workers easy
I've been using support network for 3 years to help me find skilled and reliable support workers. Tanish and his team have developed an excellent database that makes finding and contracting workers simple and due to thier vetting process and recruitment style, I've been able to make sustainable working relationships with thier staff which give my clients continuity and allows them to really feel a part of my team! .... cannot praise support network, Tanish and his team high enough!
Support network helps my business to find quality support staff
People often think care means going somewhere. A hospital, a facility, a place set up with equipment and checklists. But for a lot of families in Brisbane, the kind of care they’re after is quieter. It’s still clinical, it still needs skill, but they want it where life already happens inside the home. That’s where in-home nursing steps in. Not as a replacement for medical care, but as a way to keep care close without pulling people away from everything familiar.
When someone’s dealing with an ongoing condition or recovering from something that’s taken the energy out of them, the last thing they need is disruption. We’ve seen it again and again people do better when they stay in their space. That’s why families reach out. They want their mum, their partner, their uncle, whoever it is, to get real help without being pushed into somewhere they don’t know. And that’s what we do. Support Network sends qualified nurses to homes across Brisbane, not just to tick off duties, but to sit beside the situation and handle it properly.
Sometimes that means blending in with a routine that already works. Sometimes it means setting up something new. But it always starts the same way by listening. We’re not here to make things more clinical than they need to be. We’re here to make care feel like it belongs where it’s being given.
It all fits within what many people already have in place. If someone’s receiving support through NDIS or has a Home Care Package, we understand that world. We work inside it, not around it. We help families understand where nursing support can fit without creating extra layers or slowing things down with confusion. And if someone’s not sure where to begin, that’s okay too. We guide people through the options, not with pressure, just with clarity.
In-home nursing isn’t a side offering it’s a steady kind of care that works with the pace of life, not against it. And in Brisbane, more families are choosing it because they’ve seen the difference it makes not in charts or reports, but in how someone sleeps, how they eat, how they look when the nurse walks through the door.
Care isn’t one thing. It stretches. Some days it’s clinical, other days it’s gentle. A nurse might show up for something clear, like wound dressing or pain management. But even then, it’s rarely just that. There’s always more going on. Someone might be anxious. Or weak. Or tired in a way that’s not about sleep. And the nurse has to see all of it, not just the part they were called for.
In Brisbane, the support we give shows up in homes where people are going through all kinds of things. There’s the man recovering after a stroke who needs help walking again, slowly, with patience. The woman whose insulin needs checking at the same time every morning. The older person who hasn’t had a proper shower in days because moving hurts and they don’t want to ask their daughter again. Our nurses come into those moments and make them easier. Not by rushing, not by being clinical for the sake of it, but by knowing when to talk, when to act, and when to wait.
We also see people during recovery. Not hospital recovery home recovery. The part where everything feels a bit shaky. A step too far, and there’s another setback. That’s where steady nursing matters. It’s not about constant intervention. It’s about quiet presence, making sure nothing slips through the cracks. Checking if the swelling is worse. Seeing if someone’s appetite is still gone. Catching those details that don’t scream but still signal something’s off.
There are people who need help with medication reminders, guidance, sometimes just encouragement. Others who rely on continence support, but want it handled with dignity, not like a task. Then there’s palliative care, which goes far beyond treatment. It’s about easing someone through a stage that demands calm, focus, and care that doesn’t flinch.
Every house is different. Every person. So we don’t walk in with a standard list. We look, we listen, we decide what’s needed that day, in that moment. That’s what nursing should feel like. Something personal, not just a service.
We don’t set a limit on who gets support. There’s no one-size line here. If someone’s at home and needs nursing care, we find a way to make that work. In Brisbane, that could mean showing up for a man living with disability who needs daily help managing a few health needs that don’t go away on their own. Or it could mean helping an older woman keep up with wound care after a long hospital stay so she doesn’t end up going back too soon. It’s wide, it’s varied, and we’ve learned to meet people wherever they are in it.
Post-surgery care is a big one. People come home too early these days, but recovery doesn’t always follow hospital timelines. They’re sore, they’re tired, they’ve got medications they don’t fully understand, and that’s where a steady nurse helps. We keep the healing going without shifting everything around the person.
Children need support sometimes too, and that can be hard on a family. Whether it’s managing a condition or providing a little space for the parents to rest while we handle the care, it’s something we’ve been trusted with. Complex care isn’t only about machines or advanced tasks it’s also about knowing how to be present when things are delicate.
And there are people who don’t need help every day. Some families call once a week. Some just want us to pop in for a specific task. Others want us around daily. That’s fine. There’s no fixed mould. Some care is ongoing. Some care is temporary. It all matters, and we don’t treat it any differently just because the schedule shifts.
When someone in the house needs care, it affects everyone. It’s not just about tasks, it’s the thinking that never stops. The checking, the double-checking, the worry about whether something’s been missed. It wears people out in ways that don’t always show on the outside. That’s something we see all the time in Brisbane homes. And that’s why part of our nursing care has nothing to do with charts or equipment; it's about families who’ve been carrying the load and need someone to stand beside them for a while.
Sometimes we offer respite. Not as a break that feels like guilt, but as something that lets people breathe without feeling like they’ve walked away. Whether it’s a few hours to step out, get rest, or just think clearly for a bit we make sure someone’s still there, doing the work, keeping things steady.
There’s also the part where family members want to keep being involved, but need help figuring things out. They might want to help with dressings, or medication, or hygiene tasks but they don’t feel confident. We guide them through that, step by step, not like a lesson, more like someone showing how it’s done without making them feel small. When people understand how to help safely, it lowers their stress and lets them stay connected in the care, without feeling lost in it.
And for some, the hardest part isn’t physical, it's emotional. Watching someone’s health shift, even slowly, is a weight. And we don’t pretend to fix that. But we know what that space feels like, and our presence is often enough to lift it, just a little. Just knowing there’s a nurse who’s been through this before, who knows what to expect, who doesn’t get thrown by it, that makes a difference.
Keeping someone at home longer isn’t just about medical care. It’s about helping the people around them feel supported too. And that’s something we never overlook.
Starting care doesn’t need to be a drawn-out process. When people reach out to us, they’re usually already juggling too much. They don’t want delays, and they don’t want more questions than answers. We try to keep things clear, and we don’t make them run around chasing paperwork. It all begins with a conversation.
You contact us, we listen. We ask what’s going on, not just the surface stuff but what’s really needed. From there, we line up a nurse to visit and do an assessment this helps us understand what kind of support fits. It’s not about running through a script. It’s about looking at the person, the house, the needs, and shaping the care around that.
Once things are clear, care starts. Sometimes the same week, sometimes quicker. Depends on the situation, but we don’t drag it out.
Support Network works in a way that brings people together not just nurses, but support workers too when needed. If someone’s already receiving daily help with other tasks, our team knows how to fit into that rhythm instead of interrupting it.
Here’s how it usually goes:
If it feels like a lot, don’t worry. We’re used to guiding people through it, step by step. Just reach out, and we’ll walk it from there.
It’s one of the first things people ask and we understand why. Funding can be confusing. But the good news is, there are ways to make nursing care work, and we’re here to help figure that out. Whether you’re on a government-funded plan or managing things privately, there’s usually a path forward.
A lot of the families we support in Brisbane are already linked to the NDIS. That might mean a self-managed plan where you choose your providers directly, or a plan-managed setup where someone else handles the payment side. Either way, nursing care can be part of it. We’ve worked under both arrangements and we know how to step into them without making it more complex.
Others might be receiving a Home Care Package. Nursing fits into those too, especially when someone needs clinical support at home but wants to avoid heading to a hospital or a centre.
And if someone’s not on any plan yet or isn’t eligible, we also support private arrangements. That’s something we discuss clearly before anything starts
To put it simply:
We don’t just give care, we explain how to get it, and we stay around to make sure it keeps running smoothly. If funding feels like a barrier, talk to us first. It’s probably simpler than it looks.
Care is care, but the way it’s given changes everything. In Brisbane, we’ve worked with families across suburbs, different homes, different needs but what stays the same is how we show up. Quietly, steadily, with a focus on the person first, not just their condition.
People trust us because we don’t treat care like a product. Our nurses don’t come in with clipboards and walk through the house like strangers. They sit, they listen, they ask the right questions, and they notice the things others miss. It’s not rushed, and it’s not cold. And families feel that. That’s what keeps them coming back when someone else needs help.
You’re not just getting a service, you're getting a team that understands how heavy care can feel when you’re doing it alone. And we don’t let people carry that alone.
Yes, we do. Our team works across different settings, including public and private hospitals, aged care facilities, and even residential care homes. Whether it’s short-term support inside a public health department or stepping into a private acute unit for specialist nursing roles, we’ve got nurses and carers who’ve done the work before and understand what’s needed. The same goes for private aged care facilities we’re familiar with the pace, the needs, and how to slot in without causing disruption.
We’ve been called into plenty of rural healthcare facilities over the years, and it’s something we take seriously. Health care in remote areas looks different, it’s not always about high-tech machines, sometimes it’s about one good nurse making all the difference. We support remote communities where agency nursing is often the only consistent care available. Whether it’s basic health support or something more critical, we know how to move quickly and work with limited resources when needed.
Every nurse, support worker, or carer staff we send out is properly vetted. That means full police checks, reference checks, and up-to-date credentials for their field. If they’re stepping into specialist roles like critical care or mental health they’ve got the background and qualifications to match. We don’t take shortcuts, and we don’t rush through the registration process. It’s about making sure the right people show up, fully ready, and fully safe.
Yes, absolutely. We’ve supported shift management for a range of places public hospitals, aged care centres, even private aged care facilities that run 24/7. We don’t just drop in staff and walk away. Our team communicates with facility coordinators, understands scheduling gaps, and steps in to keep the workflow steady. From personal care workers covering night shifts to registered nurses needed for day blocks, we can help fill those roles without making it feel like a revolving door.
It’s probably the way we balance skill and attitude. We’ve got healthcare professionals who are fully qualified specialist nurses, carers, personal care workers, health practitioners but what families and facilities mention the most is how supportive our team feels when they arrive. They don’t walk in like strangers. They walk in ready to be part of the day, whether that’s in a residential aged care setting or a fast-paced unit inside a hospital. We focus on consistency, not just filling a gap. That’s what sets us apart.
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