Royal Far West provides a comprehensive multi-disciplinary service to children from rural and remote NSW with non-acute developmental, behavioural, learning and associated mental health disorders, where there are no appropriate local services, or in partnership with rural service providers.
Referrals for eligible children are from general practitioners or specialists.
The service is provided:
The service involves comprehensive pre-assessment planning and case-conferencing (the latter occurring both within the clinical-educational service at Manly, and with rural service providers using remote technologies).
The clinical team at Royal Far West covers a breadth of professions involved in child development and emotional wellbeing, including speech pathology, paediatrics, child and adolescent psychiatry, psychology, nursing, occupational therapy, social work, dietetics, orthoptics and physiotherapy.
Children attending the Manly site are accompanied by their parent/s or caregiver/s and stay in hostel style accommodation. All meals are provided.
Research partnerships with the University of New South Wales and Macquarie University ensure Royal Far West is both contributing to, and kept abreast of, the latest research on child developmental disorders.
The SURF Project is a collaborative research project between the University of New South Wales and Royal Far West aimed at improving the effectiveness of prevention, early intervention and treatment of child and adolescent developmental and mental health problems. The program aims to identify the abilities of children with a variety of developmental and mental health difficulties to ‘read’ emotions in other people and evaluate an innovative treatment to assist in this area. It is well suited to the diverse clientele and services provided through Royal Far West and is designed to produce outcomes that can be directly translated into clinical practice in community settings.
This joint project with the University of New South Wales investigates the effects of Oxytocin on the child’s ability to understand social cues and interact appropriately in social situations. Oxytocin is a hormone found naturally in the human body and research indicates that it is associated with social approach behaviours such as increased eye contact, emotion recognition and social memory. Through this project we hope to learn about how Oxytocin operates in children who have an Autism Spectrum Disorder. This project is one of the first of its kind. It is open to boys aged 8-16 years who are accessing services through Royal Far West who have a diagnosis of Autism Spectrum Disorder.
Royal Far West is involved in a joint study with Macquarie University which is part of a five-year project funded by the Australian Research Council. The study aims to understand the speech-processing difficulties of children with specific language impairment and autism.