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Richmond Wellbeing Inc (Richmond Wellbeing)
ABN unknown
Total Won
$60.4M
Contracts
3
Agencies
1
show_chart Government Revenue Over Time
Contract History
| WA-MHC92 | MHC92 core contract comprises of the following schedules and services: Schedule C1 – Service Requirement – Staffed Residential Services Service 1 - Staffed Residential Services - Community Options – Kelmscott Service 2 – Staffed Residential Services: Crisis Respite Services Service 3 – Service Requirement – Staffed Residential Services Intermediate Care Accommodation At 4 Locations Service 4 – Service Requirement – Staffed Residential Services: Long Term Supported Accommodation: Bassendean Service 5 – Service Requirement – Staffed Residential Services: Adult Homeless Services: Ngulla Mia Schedule C2 – Service Requirement – Personalised Support - Linked To Housing: Two Community Supported Residential Units: Bunbury & Busselton Schedule C3 – Service Requirement - Personalised Support—Other: Metropolitan Area | Mental Health Commission | $51,437,284 |
| WA-MHC828 | The Mental Health Commission (MHC) is seeking a provider or a consortium of providers to provide accommodation and support services in line with the service requirements for up to 16 beds as an interim service (while a purpose-built facility is being constructed). The interim accommodation may be for less than 16 beds and be provided in one facility or through several. It is preferred that the interim youth mental health and AOD homelessness service is located in the North Metropolitan health region, or surrounding suburbs. Adequate and appropriate infrastructure needs to be available with an expected operational start date of May 2021. To ensure the proposed infrastructure is appropriate, the MHC reserves the right to undertake site visits (including an interim inspection by the Licencing and Accreditation Regulatory Unit (LARU)) as part of the contract award decision. These site visits may apply to all Respondents to the Request. Specifically, the availability of a suitable provider and their capacity to provide quality services, within existing infrastructure (with minimal refurbishment and/or significant associated costs to achieve LARU standards) will influence the award of contract. The interim youth mental health and AOD homelessness service aims to enhance individual wellbeing, optimise independent functioning and improve quality of life for young people who are homeless and have a mental health issue, with or without a co-occurring AOD issue. Through the provision of recovery programs in a residential setting, young people using this service will be supported to transition from homelessness or being at risk of homelessness, to suitable, stable and safe accommodation. | Mental Health Commission | $8,319,289 |
| WA-MHC237 | Mutual support and self-help includes services that provide information and peer support to people with a lived experience of mental illness. People meet to discuss shared experiences, coping strategies and to provide information and referrals (Metropolitan Health and Aged Care Services Division 2003). Self-help groups are usually formed by peers who have come together for mutual support and to accomplish a specific purpose. Distinguishing features: Group-based services Comprising individuals with common experience and interest Led by one or more volunteer/unpaid consumer peers Provided on a face-to-face basis or through interactive online forums. Hearing Voices (HV) is a descriptive term for a range of sensory experiences and are commonly referred to as auditory hallucinations. These experiences, however, can also include visual, smell, touch and other sensations. In some but not all cases, Hearing Voices is often regarded as an indication of mental illness. The Hearing Voices Network (HVN) supports voice hearers through the development of hearing voices groups in Western Australia (WA), promotes awareness of the hearing voices program by offering regular training, the production of an information booklet and development of a website. Services that are provided to individuals with mental illness, carers and other stakeholders all who may be internal to the Service Provider or external to the Service Provider, include: Support of hearing voices groups to give individuals who have these experiences opportunity to speak freely about them with each other; Support of individuals with hearing voices experiences to understand and make sense of them, to learn and to grow from them in their own way; A database to demonstrate the extent to which the HVN is providing information, support and advocacy for individuals and families. This will also assist future planning of the HVN in Western Australia; A sustainable pool of volunteers to support the associated RFWA staff member/Manager and encourage the sustainability of the HVN beyond the term of the grant funding Raise awareness of HVN by: A regular newsletter An updated information booklet information on the web and social media Stronger links with carers, family and friends; Ongoing education and training to voice hearers, allied health workers, service providers and facilitators of hearing voices groups who are internal or external to the Preferred Service Provider in Western Australia. | Mental Health Commission | $627,020 |
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