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Displaying 31 - 40 results of 71 for "Call+of+Duty+Mobile+skin+mod+OBB+/+PAK"
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Covid-19 Insights Series - Pacific connectedness and wellbeing in the pandemic
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Te Hiringa Mahara has produced a series of short reports during 2022 and 2023 to add our collective understanding of the wellbeing impacts of the pandemic and to provide key insights on wellbeing areas or populations of focus. Pacific connectedness and wellbeing in the pandemic This report looks at
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Pushing ahead with Phase two of the Health NZ and Police mental health response changes
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Ora share their plans and have good communication systems in place. We have heard concerns about communication of the proposed changes from many people. We must keep the focus on the people who access these services and continue to call for input from people with lived experience and
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Contact us
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@mhwc.govt.nz or call 021 431 658. Keep up-to-date with our work Sign-up to our mailing list and we will email you news, event notices and other updates. Sign-up here Transparency Statement The objective of Te Hiringa Mahara in performing its functions and exercising its powers, under
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Advocacy
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kaupapa Māori services Learn about our call for equitable funding of kaupapa Māori mental health and addiction services. Improve wellbeing for rangatahi and young people Learn about how we can support rangatahi and young people. International relationships Find out how Te Hiringa Mahara connects with
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Te Huringa: Mental Health and Addiction Service Monitoring Reports 2022
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increased over the past five years. Despite calls in 2018 from He Ara Oranga to minimise coercive treatment, our measures show an increase in the use of solitary confinement (seclusion) and no decrease in the use of community treatment orders. Watch our NZ Sign Language Te Huringa: Change and
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Mental health and addiction system performance monitoring report | 2025 downloads
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mental health and addiction system to realise the vision set out in He Ara Oranga. All six shifts are grounded in the experience of people with living and lived experience of mental distress and addictions. The shifts call for a mental health and addiction system that: Realises the potential of
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Te Huringa Tuarua 2023 webinar series
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announce that we will be holding a series of webinars where we will share key findings as well as our calls to action from our recent mental health and addiction service monitoring reports. Earlier this year, we released Te Huringa Tuarua 2023, a suite of connected reports: a summary report as well
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Covid-19 Insights Series - Exercising rangatiratanga during the COVID-19 pandemic
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effective government support can be optimised when Māori responses are trusted, acted upon, and enabled through the realignment of wellbeing system processes. We thus call on the government to provide sustained support and resources to Māori to continue to deliver for their communities. Read other reports
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Bigger role for mental health and addiction peer support workforce called for
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The significant contribution made by peer support workers in the mental health and addiction system is highlighted in a new insights paper released today by Te Hiringa Mahara – Mental Health and Wellbeing Commission. The findings of the Peer Support Workforce Insight Paper include calls
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Te Hiringa Mahara to continue to advocate for young people after Oranga Tamariki Bill passes third reading
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care are a priority for us and in 2023 we will release insights about the collective voice of young people calling for better support of their mental health and wellbeing. “This work will add weight to our belief that the voices and knowledge of young people should be central to the design of systems