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Who is Nomadic Care for?

2 min read

Docs Category: Basics
Docs Tags: providers, patients, carers, clinics, aged care, NDIS, allied health, GP, family support, care team

Short answer #

Nomadic Care is for healthcare and care organisations that support patients or clients over time. It is useful for providers, clinics, aged care services, NDIS providers, allied health practices, GP clinics, patients, clients and carers.

Overview #

Nomadic Care is most useful where care continues after the appointment. This includes care plans, recurring tasks, monitoring, progress tracking, forms, documents, follow-ups, telehealth and carer involvement.

It is designed to help both sides of care: the organisation delivering care and the patient or client receiving care.

Main user groups #

1. Providers and clinics #

Providers use Nomadic Care to manage care plans, assign tasks, review patient progress, share documents and coordinate care.

This may include:

  • Nurses.
  • Allied health professionals.
  • GPs.
  • Practice nurses.
  • Care coordinators.
  • Case managers.
  • Support coordinators.
  • Clinical leads.

2. Patients and clients #

Patients and clients use the mobile app to view their tasks, complete care actions, receive reminders, access documents, join telehealth sessions and stay connected with their care team.

3. Carers and Care Buddies #

Family members, carers or trusted support people may be involved where appropriate. This can be useful when a patient needs help remembering tasks, understanding care instructions or staying engaged.

4. Organisations #

Nomadic Care can support organisations such as:

  • Aged care providers.
  • NDIS providers.
  • Allied health clinics.
  • GP clinics.
  • Nurse-led services.
  • Home care providers.
  • Community health services.

When Nomadic Care is a good fit #

Nomadic Care is a strong fit when:

  1. Patients have tasks to complete between appointments.
  2. Care plans need to be tracked over time.
  3. Multiple care team members are involved.
  4. Family carers or support people need visibility.
  5. The provider wants better progress information.
  6. The organisation wants to reduce missed follow-ups.

Common questions this article answers #

  • Is Nomadic Care for aged care?
  • Is Nomadic Care for NDIS providers?
  • Can GP clinics use it?
  • Can allied health providers use it?
  • Can family carers be involved?
  • Is Nomadic Care for patients or providers?

Get started #

If your care model involves regular follow-ups, care plans, patient tasks, remote support or carer involvement, Nomadic Care is likely to be relevant.

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