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Australia’s disability employment services program: Participant perspectives on factors influencing access to work

Version 2 2024-06-19, 06:31
Version 1 2023-10-23, 23:35
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-19, 06:31 authored by A Devine, M Shields, S Dimov, H Dickinson, C Vaughan, R Bentley, Tony LaMontagneTony LaMontagne, A Kavanagh
Disability employment programs play a key role in supporting people with disability to overcome barriers to finding and maintaining work. Despite significant investment, ongoing reforms to Australia’s Disability Employment Services (DES) are yet to lead to improved outcomes. This paper presents findings from the Improving Disability Employment Study (IDES): a two-wave survey of 197 DES participants that aims to understand their perspectives on factors that influence access to paid work. Analysis of employment status by type of barrier indicates many respondents experience multiple barriers across vocational (lack of qualifications), non-vocational (inaccessible transport) and structural (limited availability of jobs, insufficient resourcing) domains. The odds of gaining work decreased as the number of barriers across all domains increased with each unit of barrier reported (OR 1.22, 95% CI 1.07, 1.38). Unemployed respondents wanted more support from employment programs to navigate the welfare system and suggest suitable work, whereas employed respondents wanted support to maintain work, indicating the need to better tailor service provision according to the needs of job-seekers. Combined with our findings from the participant perspective, improving understanding of these relationships through in-depth analysis and reporting of DES program data would provide better evidence to support current DES reform and improve models of service delivery.

History

Journal

International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health

Volume

18

Article number

ARTN 11485

Pagination

Jan-20

Location

Switzerland

ISSN

1661-7827

eISSN

1660-4601

Language

English

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

21

Publisher

MDPI