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Displaying 1 - 10 results of 40 for "博園BOT 晶淨"
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Public input critical as new Mental Health and Wellbeing Strategy released
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News-term vision, we want to see targeted, measurable actions to deliver meaningful change. “Te Hiringa Mahara is calling for the inclusion of specific effort directed to improving outcomes for populations with the highest need through effective, accessible solutions that are designed both with
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Wellbeing
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He Ara Oranga wellbeing outcomes framework He Ara Oranga wellbeing outcomes framework shows how wellbeing will be achieved from both a te ao Māori perspective and a shared perspective, which also applies to Māori. Wellbeing reports Achieving equity of Pacific mental health and wellbeing outcomes
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The future of primary mental health care
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components of an effective landscape noted down include: Community oriented, locally-led and flexible Integrated across key boundaries – both horizontally with community services and vertically with specialist services Access to primary care needs to be fast and accessible Mental health and physical
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Age-ban on social media can’t solve mental distress on its own
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Newsonline environments. What we know is that online safety is a driver of wellbeing for young people. In addition, young people are digital experts who are highly attuned to both the benefits and the harms that come with online spaces and specifically with social media use. Young people have told Te
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Leadership
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, complement her role in Te Hiringa Mahara. Holding strong interest both personal and professional in Māori mental health and wellbeing, te reo Māori, te ao Māori, mātauranga Māori and Te Tiriti, Maraea embraces all these ‘taonga tukuiho’ as lifelong pursuits of continuous learning for all. Maraea holds a
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Urupare mōrearea: Crisis responses monitoring report
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happen to improve crisis responses in both the short term and the longer term. Our key findings include: Crisis services are hard to navigate, fragmented and patchy, and many people don’t get the help they need. Fewer people have a recorded crisis activity, however, a higher proportion are urgent
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Governance
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published in the government gazette . Our Board must make sure that it effectively seeks and understands the views of Māori as tāngata whenua, of people with lived experience of mental distress or addiction (or both) and the people who support them, as well as Pacific people, and other groups and
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Youth wellbeing insights
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and young people Social media and digital spaces are deeply integrated into many rangatahi Māori and young people’s lives, with both benefits and harms. Young people want their online world to be safe and supportive, and platforms to be responsible for regulating and monitoring harmful material on
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Our monitoring dashboard
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monitoring framework He Ara Āwhina. This describes what an ideal mental health and addiction system looks like and is used to monitor the mental health and addiction system. He Ara Āwhina amplifies the voices of tāngata whaiora and whānau. It expresses each system aspiration from both a perspective of Te Ao
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Urupare mōrearea: Crisis responses monitoring report | 2025 downloads
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Resourcemental health system. Crisis support must be health-led, with a strong role for the lived experience workforce. People need a real choice of safe and welcoming options for both mental health and substance use crises. This must be culturally safe, trauma-informed and uphold human rights wherever