When someone you love is diagnosed with a serious illness, the amount of information coming your way can feel overwhelming. You’re suddenly trying to understand medical terms, figure out what support is available, and hold everything together for your family, all at the same time.
Palliative care exists to help with exactly that. It’s a type of end-of-life care that focuses on comfort, dignity, and quality of life for people living with a life-limiting illness.
PalAssist is a free Queensland Health-funded service built around that same goal. It connects families across Queensland with experienced nurses and allied health professionals, seven days a week.
If you’re trying to work out what palliative care services are available for your loved ones, this guide walks you through the services your family can access.
What Does Palliative Care Actually Cover?
Palliative care services aim to help people live as comfortably as possible when a serious illness can no longer be cured. This type of life care is built around patient-centred care, which means your loved one’s wishes, values, and daily needs come first.

Every plan focuses on things like:
- Where the patient wants to receive care
- Who they want involved in their treatment
- How the person wants to spend their days
- Which spiritual or cultural beliefs should guide their care
Many people start receiving palliative care well before things become serious, sometimes from the very moment of diagnosis. The earlier it begins, the more settled the whole family tends to feel.
Now, a big part of what makes this care work so well is the team of health professionals behind it.
Medical and Nursing Support: Who Are Your Health Professionals?
Your palliative care team brings together doctors, nurses, and allied health professionals, each with a specific role in keeping your loved one comfortable. Let’s look at who each of them is and what they do.

Doctors and Nurses in Your Palliative Care Team
Palliative care doctors and nurses form the backbone of your care team. They manage pain, monitor symptoms, and keep communication open between specialists and your GP.
After years of working with Queensland families, we know how much it helps when doctors and nurses visit regularly, rather than waiting for an emergency.
Think about it this way: your nurse checks in on comfort levels, reviews medication, and makes sure the whole family feels heard. Specialists step in when symptoms become harder to control and work alongside your GP to adjust treatment as the illness progresses. All of this happens in close coordination, so your care team catches everything from the outset.
Allied Health Professionals Who Support Daily Life
Most people are surprised to learn how many different professionals are involved beyond doctors and nurses. So what does this actually mean for you?
A physiotherapist helps maintain movement and physical strength for as long as possible. Social workers step in to assist with practical concerns, from financial stress to family communication.
Beyond these, dietitians and speech therapists address eating and swallowing difficulties that often affect a patient’s overall well-being (something that often gets overlooked until it becomes a serious concern).
Bottom Line: Each member of the broader healthcare team plays a distinct role, and together they cover far more ground than any single professional could.
Personal Care Services for Day-to-Day Comfort
Personal care services focus on your loved one’s day-to-day comfort at home. A trained carer visits regularly, handling the physical tasks that can wear you out fast.
In reality, most families are caught off guard by how much hands-on help is actually available through community palliative care services (and yes, a lot of it comes at no cost through Queensland Health if you have a Medicare card).
Here’s what that support commonly includes:
- Personal hygiene assistance: Trained carers help with bathing, dressing, and grooming so they maintain dignity and comfort each day.
- Equipment and aids: Your care providers can arrange items like hospital beds, wheelchairs, and mobility aids, and deliver them straight to your door.
- Transport support: Getting to and from appointments can be exhausting. Queensland Health offers transport assistance in many areas to take that pressure off.
- Respite care: Carers need rest too. Even a short break helps you come back with more energy for them.
For most people in this situation, this level of hands-on assistance is what makes home-based care truly workable. They get to stay in a familiar environment, and you get the backup you need to keep going.
But day-to-day assistance is only one part of the picture. How the person feels on the inside, and how your family holds up emotionally, deserves just as much attention.
Emotional and Mental Health Support in End-of-Life Care
Everyone in the household carries the weight of a serious diagnosis differently, and each person deserves a space to work through it.
Counsellors and psychologists work directly with patients and families to process grief, anxiety, and the complex feelings that come with this stage of life. That might look like one-on-one sessions, or it could be a group setting where carers connect with others who truly understand what they’re going through.
Plus, spiritual care workers stand ready to honour your loved one’s beliefs and values, regardless of faith background.
For a lot of families, this side of care is just as important to overall well-being as any medical treatment. PalAssist provides free phone and online support. Registered nurses and allied health professionals answer every call, ready to help families through exactly these moments.
Can You Get Palliative Care at Home? Queensland Health Options Explained
Yes, you can. Queensland Health funds a range of community-based options, so you can keep an eye on your loved one’s comfort without uprooting their entire routine.
The services that come to your door are more thorough than most families anticipate:
Home-Based Palliative Care Services in Queensland
A community care team works around the patient’s schedule, managing local services so nothing slips through. That typically includes:
- Managing local services and appointments around the patient’s availability
- Visiting regularly to monitor and manage symptoms as they change
- Reviewing medication to keep pain and discomfort under control
- Checking in on the family to ensure everyone is coping
Receiving palliative care at home also means your care team coordinates everything around your schedule, so you’re not left chasing appointments or paperwork.
When Hospital or Inpatient Care Becomes the Right Fit
Home care works well for many families, but there are times when inpatient care becomes the safer and more effective option. For example, when symptoms become too complex to manage day to day, a hospital-based palliative care unit provides continuous nursing and specialist support.
Sometimes, outpatient clinics offer a practical middle ground for patients who don’t need full admission but still require regular specialist input. In some cases, a short inpatient stay is all it takes to stabilise things before heading back.
And if an emergency arises, having an established relationship with your care team means the right people already know the patient’s history (and that familiarity alone can take a lot of pressure off the family).
Life-Limiting Illness and Palliative Care Providers: What to Expect
Your first contact with the healthcare providers sets the tone for everything that follows. They approach a life-limiting illness with one clear priority: getting everyone on the same page early.
That initial appointment usually covers:
- Initial assessment: Your care team looks at physical, emotional, and practical needs together, so nothing gets missed from the outset.
- Your loved one’s wishes: Preferences, values, and personal beliefs all inform the care plan, and palliative care providers treat those with genuine respect.
- Family involvement: Everyone with a role in decisions gets a seat at the table.
- Ongoing reviews: Care plans for a terminal illness aren’t set and forget. Your team revisits and adjusts them regularly as circumstances shift.
Right from that first conversation, the goal is to make sure the person feels heard and that your family feels ready for the road ahead.
Supporting the Whole Family Through Terminal Illness
Palliative care covers the whole family, including the patient. Carers, partners, and children each have access to their own dedicated support.
Drawing from our experience working with Queensland families, those who cope best are often those who reached out early, before grief became overwhelming. Because early contact gives carers time to understand what’s ahead. Education sessions, training programs, and regular check-ins build the kind of confidence that’s hard to find once things become urgent.
Plus, younger ones in the household, including children and young people, can receive age-appropriate guidance to help them process what they’re going through. Beyond the immediate household, friends and the broader community play a role too.
Palliative care teams recognise that a serious illness affects an entire network of people. If you’re reading this and wondering where to take the next step, the final section tells you exactly where to turn.
You Don’t Have to Work This Out Alone
At any stage of a life-limiting illness, the support your family needs is available, and it starts with a single conversation.
PalAssist is a free Queensland Health-funded service. Registered nurses and allied health professionals run it, and they’re ready to help. You can reach the team by:
- Phone: 1800 772 273
- Online chat at palassist.org.au
- Email for non-urgent general information and resources
A range of community organisations across Queensland also offer additional support for families dealing with this period. Your palliative care team can point you toward the suitable ones based on where you live and what you need.
You’ve taken a meaningful step just by looking into this. Reach out to PalAssist today, because no family should have to face this without the right people beside them.
Disclaimer
This blog provides general health and product information for educational purposes only. It is not intended to diagnose, treat, or replace advice from your healthcare professional. Always seek guidance from your GP, nurse, continence advisor, or pharmacist regarding your individual needs. If symptoms persist or you’re unsure about product use, consult a qualified healthcare provider.
