Deafness and Mental Health Services
Queensland Health offers a Deafness and Mental Health Statewide Consultation and Liaison Service that connects Deaf and hard of hearing people with appropriate and accessible mental health care.
This is the only government service of its kind in Australia.
Getting a referral
If you are Deaf or hard of hearing and need help accessing appropriate mental health care, download the Deafness and Mental Health Service referral request form (PDF, 151kB) and have your GP complete it. Forms can be submitted by fax to (07) 3317 1296 or via email to deafness_mhs@health.qld.gov.au.
Therapy programs and counselling
We also offer some therapy and counselling programs that are culturally and linguistically appropriate for Deaf and hard of hearing people. The team works with other health professionals, including psychologists and counsellors, to provide sessions that meet your needs.
Mind and Memory Research for Older Deaf People project
The Deafness and Mental Health Statewide Consultation and Liaison Service is committed to research. The service’s Mind and Memory Research for Older Deaf People project invited Deaf people over the age of 50 to participate in a test that measured memory decline. The test will be used to create a culturally validated tool equal to that of hearing people.
Resources
- Self-care for sign language interpreters (PDF, 187kB)
- YouTube playlist - mental health questions and answers for the Deaf community
- Interpreting and translating guidelines and resources
- Deafness and Mental Health Statewide Consultation and Liaison Service information for health professionals
Hospital welcome
The Hospital welcome video provides information about what to expect while in hospital, such as identification checks, medication safety, preventing falls, infection control and hospital discharge. You and your loved ones are encouraged to ask questions to make sure you understand what goes on during your stay.
Informed consent in healthcare
If your health care worker wants to test or treat you, they must ask for your consent first. Informed consent is when you clearly understand your illness or health problem, and agree to what your health worker is going to do.
Be strong
A video about deafness and Aboriginal mental health.
Contact us
For information on this service or to provide feedback, contact us by:
- Phone: (07) 3317 1080
- Fax: (07) 3317 1296
- Text: 0427 598 076
- Email: Deafness_MHS@health.qld.gov.au