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Displaying 71 - 80 results of 143 for "đất đà lạt"
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Pushing ahead with Phase two of the Health NZ and Police mental health response changes
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reporting on this later in 2025 and expect this to inform future service design and improvements. Read the Implementation of Phase Two of Mental Health Response Changes to start announcement (8 April 2025)
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Governance
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actively studying towards a Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) at the University of Auckland’s School of Population Health. Wayne Langford, Board member Wayne Langford, Board member. Wayne, his wife Tyler and three boys dairy farm in Golden Bay. Milking 250 cows on a Once-a-Day milking system. The Langford’s
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Rolling out more options for crisis care
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to have immediate access to help, hope, and healing. It’s important to have a safe and welcoming place to go, and a compassionate and culturally appropriate response. There are endless possibilities to co-create options to meet the diverse needs of tāngata whaiora. Day units, warm lines, crisis
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Crisis response literature scan downloads
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reporting on this work later in 2025, with a monitoring report, and expect these findings to inform future service design and improvements. Downloads Crisis response literature scan pdf, 726 KB Download Crisis response literature scan docx, 2.8 MB Download Nau mai, haere mai. Join us for our second
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Mental Health Bill
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No summary available
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Our commitment to lived experience
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We have promised to uphold a ‘nothing about us, without us’ approach and to work together to improve wellbeing transform the mental health and addiction system. Our Lived Experience Position Statement outlines what we will do to uphold these commitments to lived experience communities.
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Refreshed strategic direction – July 2025
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In July 2025, Te Hiringa Mahara began operating under a refreshed organisational strategy that sets out how we work and what we will deliver over the next four years.
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Ake, ake, ake – A Forever Language
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is imporant in daily life, and over half of all New Zealanders agree te reo Māori should be taught in primary school. These findings are further supported by our recent wellbeing assessment showing that support for te reo Māori is high among Māori and is increasing among non-Māori. Our work on
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Our relationships
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Connecting with lived experience communities and tāngata whaiora is crucial if we are going to do our job well – monitoring the mental health and addiction system, contributing to equitable wellbeing for all, and advocating for the changes needed.
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Access and Choice programme 2025 report downloads
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Monitoring report on progress and achievements at five years