NDIS-Aligned Mindfulness & Therapeutic Activities for Disability Support
Supporting NDIS Participants with Evidence-Informed Creative Interventions
ColourRise provides structured, evidence-informed mindfulness colouring resources designed to support people living with disability across Australia.
Our programs are suitable for:
- NDIS-funded participants
- Supported Independent Living (SIL)
- Specialist Disability Accommodation (SDA)
- Community access programs
- Psychosocial recovery supports
- Autism support services
- Aged care transition participants
- Forensic disability settings
ColourRise is delivered by a provider who holds both Blue Card and Yellow Card clearance, supporting compliance within Queensland safeguarding frameworks and equivalent interstate screening requirements.
How ColourRise Aligns with the NDIS Practice Standards
ColourRise has been designed to align with key NDIS Quality & Safeguards Commission principles:
1. Person-Centred Supports
Each page allows participants to:
- Choose colours and engagement pace
- Reflect at their own cognitive level
- Engage independently or with support
2. Rights, Dignity & Respect
Activities promote:
- Emotional regulation
- Autonomy
- Trauma-sensitive language
- Non-pathologising reflection
3. Provision of Supports
ColourRise supports therapeutic goals commonly identified in NDIS plans:
- Emotional regulation
- Anxiety reduction
- Sensory modulation
- Executive functioning
- Behavioural stabilisation
- Community participation readiness
Reference:
NDIS Quality and Safeguards Commission Practice Standards (2018)
Evidence Base: Why Mindfulness & Structured Colouring Supports Disability
ColourRise integrates principles from:
Mindfulness-Based Interventions
- Kabat-Zinn (1990) – Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction
- Khoury et al. (2015) – Mindfulness reduces anxiety and depression
Art & Colour Therapy Research
- Curry & Kasser (2005) – Mandala colouring reduces anxiety
- van der Vennet & Serice (2012) – Structured colouring improves mood regulation
Sensory Regulation & Autism
- Dunn’s Sensory Processing Framework (1997)
- American Occupational Therapy Association (AOTA) sensory integration guidelines
Psychosocial Disability & Emotional Regulation
- Linehan (DBT Skills Training) – Distress tolerance & emotional regulation
- Trauma-informed frameworks (SAMHSA, 2014)
These principles are embedded into each ColourRise page through:
- Structured but non-overwhelming designs
- Evidence-curated visual imagery
- Affirmation-based language
- Gradual weekly progression (50-page structured program)
Suitable for a Wide Range of Disabilities
ColourRise supports participants living with:
- Autism Spectrum Disorder
- Intellectual disability
- ADHD
- Psychosocial disability
- PTSD and trauma-related conditions
- Acquired brain injury
- Anxiety disorders
- Developmental delay
- Dual diagnosis contexts
Because pages are:
- Low cognitive load
- Non-triggering
- Flexible in duration
- Adaptable for 1:1 or group sessions
Supports Common NDIS Goals
ColourRise can assist with goals such as:
- “Improve emotional regulation skills”
- “Increase independence in daily routines”
- “Develop coping strategies for anxiety”
- “Enhance community participation confidence”
- “Build self-esteem and self-expression”
- “Increase capacity for structured activities”
It can be implemented by:
- Support workers
- Occupational therapists
- Psychologists
- Behaviour support practitioners
- Recovery coaches
- SIL team leaders
Practical Implementation in Disability Settings
ColourRise can be used:
- As a weekly structured activity (1 page per week)
- During behaviour de-escalation periods
- As part of sensory breaks
- In community participation preparation
- During supported accommodation quiet time
- Within psychosocial recovery coaching
Because it is a digital licensed resource, services can:
- Print locally
- Integrate into existing programs
- Use in multiple sites under licence
- Include in participant resource folders
Trauma-Informed & Neurodivergent Affirming
ColourRise avoids:
- Infantilising language
- Religious content (unless requested)
- Overstimulating imagery
- Overly complex patterns
- Clinical jargon
Instead, it promotes:
- Psychological safety
- Emotional agency
- Gentle self-reflection
- Self-directed pace
This makes it appropriate for participants who may:
- Have experienced restrictive practices
- Present with complex trauma
- Have forensic histories
- Be transitioning from hospital or custodial settings
Governance & Safeguarding
ColourRise supports governance by:
- Providing structured documented activity
- Supporting program consistency across staff
- Aligning with NDIS safeguarding frameworks
- Supporting low-cost therapeutic engagement
- Reducing behavioural escalation triggers
Provider Credentials:
- Blue Card holder (Working with Children Check QLD)
- Yellow Card clearance (NDIS Worker Screening QLD)
- Designed for compliance with Australian disability safeguarding standards
Why Services Choose ColourRise
✔ Low cost per participant
✔ No ongoing subscription lock-in
✔ Scalable across multiple sites
✔ Suitable for mixed-ability groups
✔ Reduces staff burden
✔ Easy documentation for audits
✔ Supports positive behaviour strategies
Frequently Asked Questions
Is ColourRise NDIS funded?
ColourRise may be purchased under appropriate support categories when aligned with participant goals. Providers should confirm eligibility within participant plans.
Is this therapy?
ColourRise is an evidence-informed therapeutic support resource. It does not replace clinical therapy but can complement allied health interventions.
Can this be used in SIL or SDA?
Yes. It is particularly suitable for supported accommodation settings.
Is this suitable for Autism?
Yes. The sensory-regulated designs and predictable structure make it appropriate for many autistic participants.
Bulk Licensing for NDIS Providers Available
We provide:
- Organisation-wide licences
- Pilot pricing for new services
- Governance-aligned documentation
- Capability statements for procurement teams
Contact us to discuss implementation across your disability service.