Skip to main content
Dementia support in Top Camp, QLD

Find dementia support in Top Camp, QLD

Compare local providers and the support types that usually matter for dementia. Skip the generic directory listings, get a real shortlist.

Reviewed by Carevo Team · Updated 4 June 2026

For dementia

  • Matched to the support types that fit dementia
  • Free quotes, no obligation

It only takes one minute and it's free.

What people with Dementia in Top Camp usually need help with

Dementia is a progressive condition that affects memory, judgement, communication, and everyday function, so support needs usually change over time rather than staying static. Home Care Packages and Support at Home can fund personal care, nursing, respite, home safety changes, and dementia-capable workers who know how to respond calmly to confusion, resistance, wandering risk, and late-day deterioration. The most useful provider comparison is often not who offers the most services on paper, but who can keep the person settled, safe, and at home for longer while communicating clearly with family.

For dementia and cognitive conditions, the strongest local comparison is whether providers can keep the person safe and settled as needs increase: consistent carers, dementia-trained staff, reliable communication with family, and a realistic plan for progression rather than crisis-only changes.

What people usually compare locally

  • • Whether carers have specific dementia or cognitive care training
  • • How the provider manages increasing care needs over time without disruption
  • • Communication with family about daily changes and care plan updates
  • • Coordination with local GPs, geriatricians, and memory clinics
Dementia-specialist nursing Personal care Respite care Occupational therapy Psychology and counselling Home modifications Social support visits

Services and providers to compare first in Top Camp

For dementia and cognitive decline, compare providers who can handle the next stage as well as the current one: personal care, supervision, respite, nursing, and practical family communication. Dementia-trained staff and continuity usually matter more than a long generic service list. Use the service links below to pressure-test provider fit, not just to browse every option in the area.

Best Dementia Support provider near me

Showing 1 of 1 providers·How we rank

Get matched directly

Not finding the right match?

Leave your details and we'll connect you with dementia support providers in Top Camp — no wait list.

No login. No spam. We text or email when a match is ready.

Centenary Occupational Therapy

Top Camp, QLD and 43 others

Specialises in Home Modifications · Allied Health · Occupational Therapy

1

Centenary Occupational Therapy is a Brisbane Western Suburbs home‑visiting service providing high-quality Support at Home and NDIS services. Our experienced and registered team is committed to helping you live safely and independently in your own home and community. We support clients across Aged Care, NDIS, DVA, WorkCover, and private services, delivering tailored support to suit individual goals and needs.

How we rank providers

Rankings in Top Camp are based on real outcomes between providers and families on our platform. They are recalculated daily and cannot be purchased or influenced by advertising.

  • How this list is built. Providers shown here offer nursing, personal care, support work, allied health, occupational therapy, psychology, and social and community support, the support types most relevant to dementia. They are then ranked by demonstrated experience with dementia, providers who have actively claimed and supported dementia referrals rank above those who only list it as a capability.
  • Outcomes with families. We measure what happens after a family contacts a provider. Providers where families report positive outcomes rank higher. Multiple signals are weighted across a rolling window.
  • Condition-specific track record. Providers who have accepted and worked with dementia referrals on Carevo rank above those who only list the condition as a capability. We weight providers using their demonstrated experience with this cohort, not self-declared specialisations.
  • Service match. Providers are ranked by how closely their registered services and capabilities match what you are searching for.
  • Registration and compliance. NDIS registered and government-approved aged care providers are weighted for meeting quality and safeguards standards.
  • Local presence. Providers confirmed in Top Camp rank above those covering only the broader region.

What does "Trusted" mean? The Trusted badge is awarded to providers with a consistent record of positive outcomes with families on our platform. It is based on multiple behavioural signals and family feedback, and it cannot be purchased.

1

providers in Top Camp

26,738

providers nationally

The Dementia provider network on Carevo

33 providers on Carevo have supported people with dementia through real matched requests.31 are registered NDIS providers. Matching is based on real provider history, not self-described claims.

Supports they provide

  • • Personal care
  • • Social and community support
  • • Support workers
  • • Nursing
  • • Allied health

Where providers are

Providers experienced with dementia are listed in more than 300 suburbs across New South Wales, Queensland, Western Australia, the ACT, and other states.

Often supported alongside

Providers who support dementia most often also have experience with Incontinence, Autism, Schizophrenia, Muscular Dystrophy, and Psychosocial Disability.

About Top Camp, QLD

Population

852

Median household income

$40,768 p.a.

Local government area

Toowoomba (Regional Council)

Providers listed

1

Top Camp sits within the Toowoomba (Regional Council) local government area in QLD. Providers serving this area often cover surrounding suburbs in the same LGA, so it is worth checking neighbouring areas if you cannot find an exact match.

How providers are verified

Every provider listed is cross-checked against the official Australian registers before appearing here. This is separate from the Trusted badge, which reflects platform outcomes.

NDIS register cross-check

Every NDIS-registered provider listed is verified against the NDIS Commission register. Registration numbers and approved support groups are pulled from the official register, not self-declared.

Source: NDIS Quality and Safeguards Commission

Aged care approval status

Aged care approved status reflects the Australian Government Department of Health and Aged Care approved provider list, including service types and category groups.

Source: Department of Health and Aged Care

ABN verification

Every listing includes an Australian Business Number. Providers without a valid, active ABN do not appear in our directory.

Source: Australian Business Register

Complaints process

If you have a concern about any provider, you can lodge a complaint with the NDIS Commission or the Aged Care Quality and Safety Commission at any time. We also accept complaints via our own channel.

Source: NDIS Commission / Aged Care Commission

Care Services Available in Top Camp

Provider counts by service type in Top Camp

Home Modifications
1
Allied Health *
1
Occupational Therapy *
1
equipment
1

* Services commonly accessed for this condition

What happens after you request support in Top Camp

1. Assess the current stage

Work out whether the main needs are supervision and prompting, hands-on personal care, behaviour management, or a combination that changes throughout the day.

2. Compare experienced providers

Look at providers whose staff have dementia-specific training and experience with progressive conditions. Compare how they manage care transitions as needs increase.

3. Plan for progression

Ask how the provider handles increasing care needs, overnight support, and coordination with medical teams. Confirm whether they can scale up without switching providers.

For aged care, confirm whether the provider offers dementia-trained carers, how they manage overnight or weekend support, and what happens when the person needs a higher level of care than the current package covers.

Frequently Asked Questions

What home care services are available for people with dementia in Top Camp?
People living with dementia in Top Camp can access nursing care, personal care, dementia-specialist support workers, occupational therapy, respite, and social support visits through a Home Care Package or the Support at Home program. Carevo connects families with experienced aged care providers across the Ipswich & Toowoomba area who understand progression, behaviour change, and the importance of consistent carers and clear family communication.
What should I do if I notice memory problems in a parent in Top Camp?
If you notice signs of memory loss or confusion in a parent living in Top Camp, the first step is to arrange an appointment with their GP, who can perform an initial cognitive assessment and refer to a specialist such as a geriatrician or neurologist for a formal dementia diagnosis. Once a diagnosis is in place, My Aged Care can arrange an assessment to determine eligibility for a Home Care Package or the Support at Home program to fund in-home support. Carevo connects families in Ipswich & Toowoomba with dementia-experienced providers who can assist from that point forward.
Can someone with dementia stay at home instead of moving to a residential facility in Top Camp?
Many people with dementia in Top Camp continue living at home safely with the right support in place, including daily personal care, medication management, dementia-trained support workers, and home safety modifications. Carevo connects families in Ipswich & Toowoomba with providers who specialise in keeping people with dementia safe and comfortable at home for as long as possible.
What respite care options are available for carers of people with dementia in Top Camp?
Carers in Top Camp can access in-home respite, day respite programs, and overnight respite to give them a break while their loved one receives quality care. Respite funding may be available through a Home Care Package, the Support at Home program, or the Commonwealth Home Support Programme. Carevo can help you find respite providers in Ipswich & Toowoomba who specialise in dementia care.
What home modifications help someone with dementia stay safe in Top Camp?
Common home modifications for people with dementia in Top Camp include sensor lighting, door alarms, grab rails, simplified door handles, and removal of trip hazards. An occupational therapist can assess the home and recommend the most appropriate changes. Carevo connects you with OT providers and home modification services in Ipswich & Toowoomba that work with aged care package funding.

Understanding Dementia and Alzheimer's Disease

Dementia is a syndrome caused by progressive brain disease that affects memory, thinking, behaviour, and the ability to perform everyday activities. It affects approximately 400,000 Australians, with Alzheimer's disease being the most common cause (60-70% of cases), followed by vascular dementia, Lewy body dementia, and frontotemporal dementia. Dementia is the second leading cause of death in Australia and the leading cause of death for women. The condition progresses through stages: early (mild forgetfulness, difficulty with complex tasks), moderate (needing help with daily activities, personality changes), and severe (full dependence for all care). Most people with dementia are over 65 and access support through the aged care system, though younger-onset dementia (under 65) may access the NDIS. The right support can significantly improve quality of life for both the person with dementia and their family, particularly when it is tailored to the person's stage and adjusted as needs change.

How dementia affects daily life

Dementia progressively affects daily life across all areas. In the early stages, the person may forget recent conversations, lose items, struggle with finances, and have difficulty with complex tasks like cooking a meal with multiple steps. In the moderate stage, help is needed with dressing, bathing, eating, and finding their way around familiar places. Wandering, sundowning (increased confusion in the evening), and behavioural changes including agitation and aggression become more common. In the severe stage, the person needs full assistance with all personal care, may not recognise family members, and has difficulty swallowing. For family carers, dementia creates an enormous and increasing care burden that can last years.

What to look for in a provider

Good dementia providers use person-centred care approaches that maintain the person's dignity, preferences, and routines as much as possible. Ask whether their workers have dementia-specific training, how they manage behavioural symptoms (agitation, wandering, sundowning) without restraint, and whether they can adjust their approach as the condition progresses. Red flags include providers who use a one-size-fits-all approach, who respond to behavioural symptoms with restriction rather than understanding, who do not know the difference between dementia types, or who talk about the person rather than to them. Montessori-based dementia care and validation therapy are evidence-based approaches worth asking about.

How to access funding

For people over 65, dementia support is accessed through My Aged Care (1800 200 422). An Aged Care Assessment Team (ACAT/ACAS) assesses the person's care needs and determines eligibility for a Home Care Package (Levels 1-4) or residential aged care. Home Care Packages provide a set budget for coordinated in-home services. The Commonwealth Home Support Programme (CHSP) provides lower-level support. For people under 65 with younger-onset dementia, the NDIS may be accessed with evidence of permanent and significant functional impairment. Dementia Australia provides guidance on both pathways.

Funding and costs for dementia support in Top Camp

Lower

$9,500

per year

Typical

$37,500

per year

Higher

$54,000

per year

Home Care Package budgets range from ~$9,500/yr (Level 1) to ~$54,000/yr (Level 4). Most people with moderate dementia need a Level 3 or 4 package. Residential aged care is separate and assessed based on means and care needs.

Home Care Package providers charge a case management fee (typically 15-25% of the package) plus service delivery costs. Personal care workers typically cost $50-$70/hr. Allied health visits cost $150-$250/session.

Figures are indicative and based on the current NDIS Price Guide and published Home Care Package rates. Actual costs depend on your plan, provider, and location.

Check the Eligibility

Take our quick assessment to find out if you or your loved one qualifies.

Step 1 of 4 General estimator

What is the age of the person needing support?

Age range
OR
0 120

Need help comparing providers in Top Camp?

We can help you narrow the right service types, compare provider fit in Ipswich & Toowoomba, and avoid spending weeks contacting the wrong services.

Call free