Find support and services for end of life care.
For people in north, west and central Melbourne
What do you need?
Find someone to talk to
Talking with other people is great for your wellbeing. This section helps you find support from professionals, social groups and community centres.
Get help at home
Need some help around the house? This section helps you find in-home support from the government, specialist organisations, and the community.
Meet new people
Socialising and connecting with other people is great for wellbeing. This section helps you find social groups and activities in your community.
Be more active
Staying active has many benefits. It can help with stress, fatigue and pain. This section helps you find ways to keep moving.
Get symptom and pain support
This section helps you find support for symptoms caused by illness or treatment. It includes services from various specialist and general organisations.
Find help for carers
Carers need care, too. This section of Precious Time helps you find support for the people who look after others. It includes things such as carer support groups and respite care services.
Plan for the future
Planning for the future can give you confidence and avoid problems later on. This section has information and services to help you make legal, medical and practical decisions.
Manage your money
Financial matters can be especially hard when changes are happening in your life. This section has services that can help you manage your money.
Services
Click any category to search services. You can then refine your search by location, language, cost or other filters.
Starting difficult conversations
Starting a conversation about accessing home services can be difficult, but getting the extra support you need can help you, or the person you care for, live with dignity, compassion and confidence.
Learn how to start difficult conversationsRead our latest blog posts
Searching for the essence of goodbye
A funeral, writes Melbourne author Ruby Todd, is “a space for love and grief in their deepest concentration”. Writing in The Guardian, she explains what she learned about living by going to the funerals of strangers.
For the sake of kindness, lie before they die
Is it ever okay to lie to a dying parent? Sometimes, yes, for the benefit of all involved. US writer Cari Shane, in the magazine Proto, explains.
Supporting small children through the death of a loved one
Every child reacts differently to the death of a loved one, depending on their developmental stage, past experiences and relationship to the person who has died.