Can your payments disappear when you need them the most? One woman's experience may have the answer

Imagine this: you're in a hospital bed, struggling to remember your name, let alone keep up with paperwork and appointments.

For an Aussie woman, this wasn't just a nightmare; it was the reality, and it left her struggling mentally and financially.

What happened, and could this be your reality, too?


New South Wales local Kelly's ordeal began in late March when she started experiencing psychosis.

The 43-year-old's was so severe she believed she was being poisoned and watched.

'I couldn't even tell you my name,' Kelly recalled. 'I was completely just in another world.'

During this time, she missed a face-to-face appointment with her employment provider, CoAct, which was required for her JobSeeker payments.


compressed-pexels-woman mental health.jpeg
Kelly has struggled with the lengthy process in reinstating her JobSeeker payments. Image Credits: Pexels/Kaboompics.com


After experiencing a severe episode of psychosis, Kelly was admitted to Macquarie Hospital.

Despite being hospitalised and heavily medicated, Kelly's payments were suspended.

Her doctors provided four medical certificates to explain her absence.

However, Centrelink rejected them all and claimed that psychosis was a 'medical symptom' rather than a diagnosis.

Kelly was instructed to attend an in-person appointment to restore her payments.


With her driver's licence revoked under the Mental Health Act, a hospital social worker had to drive her to the provider's office.

'I was getting my cognitive availability back slowly at that point. But I still didn't have it totally together. I was stuttering, and I was still trying to focus,' Kelly recounted.

'I signed the document; I couldn't even read and left crying.'

For two weeks, Kelly had no income.

She could not pay her rent, and the stress of navigating the system while unwell only made her recovery harder.

Sadly, Kelly's experience is not an isolated case.


Last year, another welfare recipient in Victoria had his payments suspended while he was in hospital.

The man was recovering from brain surgery and had struggled with homelessness.

Between January and April this year, government data shows there were 157,680 payment suspensions.

In February, more than one person had their payments paused every minute.

While Services Australia paused most payment cancellations in March due to concerns about their IT system, suspensions have continued at a staggering rate.

Advocates argued that these suspensions may be unlawful and called for a complete overhaul of the so-called 'mutual obligations' system.

This system has penalised jobseekers for missing appointments or failing to submit job applications—even when they're in hospital.


The Commonwealth Ombudsman has expanded its investigation into the legality of payment cancellations.

Yet, for people like Kelly, the damage is already done.

'We've heard of cases of people in ICU having their payment suspended,' Jay Coonan from the Antipoverty Centre prefaced.

'We've heard of people who have been on their deathbed, and their families have been working with social support in hospitals to try and stop this from happening.'

With over 877,000 people on JobSeeker in April and the majority receiving the full rate of $781.10 a fortnight, the stakes are high.

For many, a payment suspension means immediate hardship—missed rent, skipped meals, and mounting stress.

The Department of Employment and Workplace Relations acknowledged these concerns, and Centrelink has apologised to Kelly while they 'worked with her to resolve this matter'.

'People seriously look down on Centrelink recipients,' Kelly shared.

'But anyone can find themselves needing their help.'

It's easy to think, 'This could never happen to me.'

Yet, as Kelly's story showed, life could change in an instant.

Illness, injury, or unexpected hardship could strike anyone, and our social safety net should be there to catch us, not make things more complicated.
Key Takeaways

  • An NSW local's Jobseeker payments were suspended while she was in hospital for psychosis, leaving her out of income.
  • Medical certificates from hospital doctors were repeatedly rejected by Centrelink, forcing the woman to attend a meeting she was unfit for.
  • Payment suspensions continue to occur on a large scale, with advocates and the Ombudsman questioning the legality and calling for an overhaul of the mutual obligations system.
  • Centrelink has apologised to the jobseeker and resolved her situation, but advocates warned that suspensions may push people into poverty.
Have you or someone you know experienced payment suspensions while dealing with illness? Should the mutual obligations system need to change? Share your thoughts about this matter in the comments section below.

MORE: Are your Centrelink payments' on hold'? Here's why you don't have to worry
 

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Dear member Towing, I agree with you, however, people who are in hospital can call Centrelink over the phone, to notify that they are in hospital and are unable to attend the Centrelink appointment. If the person in hospital does not have caring family members or has no family at all, and is is unable to call Centrelink themselves, then they can give authorisation, to one of the hospital nurses, doctors or hospital social workers, to speak on their behalf. If it is possible to make a request for an advance payment over the phone, then surely Centrelink can take the person's phone call from hospital, and reschedule an appointment for them. That way their payments will less likely be suspended. These are not people who have gone over seas, or deliberately missed appointments. They are people in hospital because of a health issue, and are calling from the hospital themselves, or have appointed a medical person or hospital social worker, to speak to Centrelink in their behalf regarding the centrelink appointment. So please with respect, don't say that nobody notifies Centrelink that they are in hospital . Good Karma to you always, God bless, 🙏🦋
I don't think a nurse, doctor, or social worker would want to be stuck on hold for up to 40+ minutes for a call to Centrelink for a patient.
 
Typical grubberment departments and most who are employed there cant get jobs in the real as their intelligence is lacking in some way or another.????
I think that Centerlink employees should have degrees in Medical Services, a Doctor of Medicine, Social Services, and Psychology before being employed as a door security person. It might help, who knows?
 
Her doctors provided four medical certificates to explain her absence.

However, Centrelink rejected them all and claimed that psychosis was a 'medical symptom' rather than a diagnosis.

This would explain our Doctor shortages, they are all working at Centrelink rejecting letters from actual doctors!!

Regardless whether it's a medical symptom or a diagnosis, those letters still explained why the woman was unable to attend her appointments due to being hospitalised.
 
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Her doctors provided four medical certificates to explain her absence.

However, Centrelink rejected them all and claimed that psychosis was a 'medical symptom' rather than a diagnosis.

This would explain our Doctor shortages, they are all working at Centrelink rejecting letters from actual doctors!!

Regardless whether it's a medical symptom or a diagnosis, those letters still explained why the woman was unable to attend her appointments due to being hospitalised.
What a.joke. they expect people suffering from psychosis to turn up for an appointment.
My ex husband had to be committed on several occasions.
I would love to be a fly on the wall watching them trying to interview him.
Firstly they would have to work out who they were talking to because any day he could be God, the Chosen One or perhaps the King of England, who knows.
Even worse he could be hearing voices telling him they were the devil's accomplices, or some secret service agency and actually try to attack them.
I know, from several run ins with Centrelink myself over the years just how stupid and incompetent they are, but expecting people suffering from psychosis to turn up for interviews really takes the cake.
 
It stinks when genuine recipients hit hard times thru no fault of their own & Clink kicks them in the guts to top it all off (victims so often seem to be soft targets to big business & govt departments these days) Yet they can turn a blind eye on immigrants receiving payments & all the assistance that our own now cannot receive) & other lazy scum that deliberately rip off the system & these scammers get away with it for decades, costing tax payers a fortune!

Strange country here where those involved in serious crimes are protected, whilst honest, hard working people are treated like crap & cannot get ahead & suffer the consequences of trying to do the right thing
:(
 
If any of these persons were any of Albo & Burke's undocumented Gazans, of the hard line Muslim faith, The Hate Australia Cause, or Burn The Aussie Flag Tribe, they'd have no problems at all.
It's only true Aussies who face & suffer these predicaments.

The sufferers are always made to jump through hoops, climb over barbed wire barriers, crawl on their belly & beg for help to restore their payments.

Its all a damned joke when they can provide all medical documentations of their prevailing medical situation of undeniable proof.
Your post is psychotic.
 
The staff at our local Centrelink office are great. It is the system they work in that causes nearly all the problems. The last LNP government were cruel and set out to destroy it and unfortunately the current Labor government are not repairing the damage.
 
Dear member Towing, I agree with you, however, people who are in hospital can call Centrelink over the phone, to notify that they are in hospital and are unable to attend the Centrelink appointment. If the person in hospital does not have caring family members or has no family at all, and is is unable to call Centrelink themselves, then they can give authorisation, to one of the hospital nurses, doctors or hospital social workers, to speak on their behalf. If it is possible to make a request for an advance payment over the phone, then surely Centrelink can take the person's phone call from hospital, and reschedule an appointment for them. That way their payments will less likely be suspended. These are not people who have gone over seas, or deliberately missed appointments. They are people in hospital because of a health issue, and are calling from the hospital themselves, or have appointed a medical person or hospital social worker, to speak to Centrelink in their behalf regarding the centrelink appointment. So please with respect, don't say that nobody notifies Centrelink that they are in hospital . Good Karma to you always, God bless, 🙏🦋
No 7777 mentally ill patients can not just phone up Centrelink.
 
Maybe if you are receiving a payment you need to ring and tell them everything beginning with

You are sick no doctor
Go to the doctor
Go to hospital even just to visit someone
Stub your toe but no doctor
Feeling sad

Lots of information.
Maybe ring and follow-up with an email
 
The whole system is bulls—t , the people who work in Centrelink are so incompetent you can ring them at three different times and ask the exact same simple question and I guarantee the answers are never the same basically they make it up as they go along they’re clueless, my sister in law has worked her whole life she is now in her early 60’s had a knee operation where the hospital ( public)stuffed up big time cannot be rectified and is now reliant on a wheelie walker permanently, she has tried to get disability pension but Centrelink insist she still must look for a job she is not an academic has only ever been a career for age care , how the hell and what is she to do in her condition, I repeat only a moron who works in these departments should be sacked and made to have to take a test to even see if they are competent and trust me 90% will fail , but government don’t care and the only time anything is done about the situations of these peoples lives is when it is brought to the attention of the public via media outlets , our governments in the last 50 years have failed the Australian people .
 
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Services Australia, which includes Centrelink, does have a mission statement. It is: "To support Australians by efficiently delivering high-quality, accessible services and payments" Services Australia states. This is further elaborated by their vision: "Make government services simple so people can get on with their lives" Services Australia states. Centrelink is part of Services Australia and delivers these services and payments on behalf of the government. “


Thought you might be interested in this statement..
 
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