Early 2025
Annual Woodcock Lecture
In May, Wellways held its 24th annual Woodcock Lecture titled Dignity by Design: Humanity in the Mental Health System. This year’s keynote speaker, Giancarlo de Vera (He/They), CEO of BEING reflected on personal experiences and the ‘slow invisible violence of coercive treatment’ that exists within the mental health system.

Left to right: Associate Professor Harry Hill, Laura Collister, Mary O’Hagan, Maria Katsonis and Giancarlo de Vera at the 2025 Annual Woodcock Lecture.
A panel of thought leaders, clinicians and advocates called for the sector to prioritise relationships and to remember that each of us hold a role in building a more humane mental health system.
Wellways has been hosting the Woodcock Lecture since 1999, and it has become a cornerstone of our advocacy work, where we and our sector partners reflect on how to create a more compassionate, human rights-led mental health system.
A Legacy of Insight: Two decades of the Woodcock Lecture
Late 2025
National Carer Strategy consultation
In October, Wellways coordinated a comprehensive submission in response to the Draft National Carer Strategy.
To inform our submission, we invited families, supporters and carers to share their insights through three online consultation sessions, and one-on-one phone conversations for those unable to attend. We also delivered two online coaching sessions to support families and carers to prepare their own individual submissions.
Our submission highlighted significant concerns about the Strategy’s ability to deliver meaningful change for carers without greater recognition that improving carer wellbeing requires addressing the structural conditions that contribute to unsustainable caring roles.
Late 2025
Foundational Supports Consultation
As a member of the Australian Psychosocial Alliance (APA) – a coalition of seven of Australia’s largest community-managed mental health providers – Wellways led the APA’s submission to the Government’s Foundational Supports consultation in November 2024.
This advocacy presented an important strategic opportunity within the broader NDIS reform process, where the unique needs of people with psychosocial disability are often overlooked in the design and delivery of disability supports.
Our Policy & Advocacy and Lived Experience leadership teams engaged with participants, families and carers to understand how the proposed supports could better include people with psychosocial disabilities. The five consultation sessions were well attended, and the voices and experiences shared directly informed the submission provided to Government.
Continue Exploring
Continue exploring more of the highlights from across the business in the 2024-25 Annual Review.
Annual Review 2024-25
Lived Experience
Reconciliation
Specialist Mental Health Services
Family and Carer Services