Why Veteran Families Feel Their Children Aren’t Safe And What Policymakers And ESOs Need To Hear

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I’m not a clinician, social worker, or NDIS professional. I’m someone who has spent a substantial time listening to Australian Defence Force (ADF) veterans and their families, especially those raising children with disabilities, developmental challenges, or complex needs.  

Across those conversations, one message has been consistent and deeply troubling: even with all the welfare systems, ex-service organisations (ESOs), government programs, and NDIS supports, many veteran parents still feel their children are not safe, understood, or protected.  

This is not a criticism of any single organisation. It’s a reflection of what families are living through and what they are courageously saying out loud. If we want to strengthen the Defence and veteran ecosystem, then we need to understand why these families feel this way.  

What veteran families are telling us clearly and consistently  

1. The system is not designed for mobile, high-stress Defence families  

Frequent relocations, disrupted schooling, inconsistent medical continuity, and the emotional impacts of service life create complexities that civilian systems simply weren’t built to manage. A child with additional needs in a Defence family is navigating far more than their diagnosis.  

2. Support collapses during relocations  

Every move resets the system: new schools, new therapists, new paediatricians, new NDIS planners, and new waitlists. Families describe losing months, sometimes years, of progress because continuity is not structurally protected.  

3. Parents feel they must fight for basic support  

This is the most common phrase I hear: ‘I’m tired of having to prove my child’s needs over and over.’ Long waitlists, repeated assessments, and siloed services leave families exhausted and fearful for their child’s wellbeing.  

4. Psychological and behavioural needs are often misunderstood  

Service-related stress, hypervigilance, emotional fatigue, and transition uncertainty ripple through the household. Children absorb this, especially those with disabilities or developmental challenges. Yet many systems treat these behaviours as isolated issues and not as part of a Defence family’s lived reality.  

5. ESOs and government agencies work hard, but in silos  

This is not about blame. It’s about structure. Families navigate DVA, NDIS, schools, paediatricians, psychologists, ESOs, and community services. While each organisation does its best within its mandate, no one is responsible for the whole picture; that’s where children fall through the cracks.  

6. Remote postings amplify every challenge  

The gap between city and remote support is not a small one; it’s a chasm. In metropolitan areas, families may access specialists, therapy, and school-based supports. In remote postings, they often rely on telehealth, fly-in specialists, limited paediatric services, long travel distances for assessments, and inconsistent school resources.  

So what services are helping Defence children?  

There are organisations doing important work, and families rely on many of them. Here is a list of important organisations and contact details:  

These organisations matter and they do good work, but families are telling us respectfully, consistently, and with increasing urgency that the system still isn’t enough.  

The core issue: no one owns the whole journey  

Veteran families don’t need more brochures, slogans, or disconnected programs. They need continuity, coordination, and a system that understands Defence life.  

They need:  

  • services that talk to each other  
  • NDIS plans that survive relocations  
  • schools that understand Defence culture  
  • psychological support that recognises service-related stress  
  • remote access that matches metropolitan standards  
  • ESOs and government agencies working as a unified ecosystem.  

Most importantly, they need a system that sees the whole child, not just the diagnosis.  

This is not a criticism; it’s a call to action.  

ESOs, policymakers, and government agencies are filled with people who care deeply about veterans and their families. But caring is not the same as coordination, and effort is not the same as outcomes.  

Veteran parents aren’t asking for special treatment. They’re asking for safety, stability, and a system that understands the realities of Defence life.  

If we want to build a stronger Defence and veteran ecosystem, we must start by listening to the families who live inside it every day, especially the children who cannot speak for themselves.  

Originally published on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/why-veteran-families-feel-children-arent-safe-what-esos-drakopoulos-w289c/?trackingId=WT9sobgy4xfVhgSVGfW47Q%3D%3D  

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