Community Partnerships Emerge as Key Strategy to Prevent Isolation Among Older Australians Under New Support at Home Program

Holistic In-Home Care

As Australia prepares for the rollout of the new Support at Home (SaH) program on 1 November 2025

A clear message is emerging across the aged care sector. Preventing isolation is no longer a “nice to have”. It is a core responsibility, and one that providers can no longer shoulder alone.

Older Australians are living longer, but many are living more quietly, often behind closed doors. For some, the phone rings less. The front door opens less. The world slowly retreats. And as the experts keep reminding us, loneliness is not just an emotion. It is a risk factor.

A serious one.

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The Silent Epidemic Inside Australian Homes

Frontline workers describe a pattern they see every day. Clients who once gardened now avoid going outside. Conversations grow shorter. Appetite disappears. Small tasks feel overwhelming. And before anyone realises it, social withdrawal has become a health hazard.

Researchers have linked isolation to greater risks of dementia, malnutrition, depression, falls, hospitalisations and early mortality. Yet many older adults never say “I’m lonely”. They simply drift into it.

Support at Home aims to change that by placing social connection at the centre of care planning, goal setting and outcome reporting.

Providers Agree: “We Don’t Have the Hours in a Day”

Support at Home social support

Across the sector, providers are candid. They want to do more, but they are stretched thin. Workforce shortages, high caseloads, clinical demands and extensive compliance tasks leave limited time for companionship, outings or emotional support.

“It’s not that we don’t care,” one service manager shared. “It’s that we cannot be everywhere. Not with the current workforce.”

That gap is exactly where a new wave of community partnerships is stepping in.

The Rise of Community Support Partnerships

Non clinical, non competing community partners are emerging as some of the most valuable collaborators in the SaH landscape. Their focus is simple but powerful: human connection.

Regular visits. Conversations. Walks. Outings. Gentle encouragement. Emotional check ins. Small rituals that bring joy back into the day.

These partners offer what the system desperately needs but cannot always supply: time, consistency and meaningful engagement.

In some cases, they give even more.

A Birthday, A Story and A Small Act of Kindness

One initiative making waves is the “Birthday Companionship Program”, aimed at clients who would otherwise celebrate alone. Another, the “Holistic Army”, sends volunteers to deliver acts of kindness and community inclusion.

Then there is “Stories of Strength”, where clients share memories, milestones and the experiences that shaped them.

Small moments, perhaps. But the ripple effect is enormous.

“We saw a client who had barely spoken for weeks suddenly light up while sharing a childhood memory,” a support worker recalled. “After that day, his confidence slowly returned. It was like he remembered who he was.”

Programs like these are turning the tide on emotional decline, one gentle interaction at a time.

A Practical Solution for SaH Providers

Support at Home requires providers to show measurable improvements in mood, confidence, participation and wellbeing. Community partners are increasingly becoming the missing link.

Providers can now integrate social connection supports directly into SaH care plans, including goals such as:

  • weekly community outings
  • companion visits
  • cultural and identity based activities
  • gentle exercise or walks
  • support regaining confidence outside the home

 

Community partners then supply the notes, observations and wellbeing updates that feed into SaH reporting.

It is a win for providers, a win for clients and a rare relief for overworked teams.

Support at Home Providers

Holistic In Home Care Steps Into the Spotlight

Among the organisations gaining recognition is Holistic In Home Care, known for its kindness driven programs, flexible companionship support and commitment to wellbeing without competing for clients.

The organisation is clear about its role.

“We are not a Support at Home provider,” the team states firmly. “We are here to lift the load, not take clients away.”

They offer companionship, community outings, confidence building, errands, emotional support, cultural activities, volunteer initiatives, wellbeing monitoring and experience based programs tailored to the client’s interests.

For many providers, this is exactly the type of partnership they need ahead of the SaH rollout.

The Future of Aged Care Is Human

Isolation cannot be solved with a one off visit. It requires continuity, empathy and real human presence. It requires people who notice the small changes. People who sit down, listen and stay long enough to make a difference.

Support at Home has made this clear. Connection is care.

As Australia prepares for the biggest aged care reform in more than a decade, one truth is becoming impossible to ignore. Preventing isolation is not just a clinical responsibility. It is a community responsibility.

And it will take partnerships to get it right.

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