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Displaying 61 - 70 results of 137 for "Karakia | Tukua te Wairua - Te Hou Ora Whānau Services"
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Commission will provide system oversight of new mental wellbeing long-term pathway
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collaboratively, and bringing focus to the right things, meaningful change can happen on the ground.” Hayden Wano says the Commission has been calling for a clear implementation plan for the direction set by He Ara Oranga and wants to see five critical areas prioritised: upholding Te Tiriti o Waitangi and
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Expert Advisory Group
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-design of the vision of what a system of services, support, and approaches should look like for people and whānau who experience mental distress, substance use harm, or gambling harm (or a combination of these). The group included a Māori EAG which supported the development of a te ao Māori perspective
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Report signals progress of Government’s response to He Ara Oranga, the inquiry into mental health and addiction
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1992 is underway and there is hope that this can take a rights-based approach built in partnership with people. New legislation won’t be transformative by itself, and must be supported by other changes, such as expanding access and increasing choice for mental health and addiction services
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Mental health and addiction system
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He Ara Āwhina Framework Our He Ara Āwhina (Pathways to Support) framework describes what an ideal mental health and addiction system looks like. We use this to assess how our system delivers for whanau an Mental health and addiction service monitoring reports Our mental health and addiction service
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More deliberate focus needed to ensure all people in Aotearoa experience good wellbeing
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wellbeing / oranga - while at the same time, there continues to be a disproportionate number of Māori individuals and whānau who are not doing well and are experiencing poor wellbeing across multiple dimensions. The Commission’s role is to assess and monitor the wellbeing of all people in New Zealand
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Accountability documents
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As an independent Crown Entity, Te Hiringa Mahara is required to publish a Statement of Intent (SOI) covering a period of four years, an annual Statement of Performance Expectations (SPE), as well as an Annual Report. Statement of Intent (SOI) Statement of Intent 2025 - 2029 This Statement of
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He Ara Āwhina development journey
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, including tāngata whaiora, whānau, and Kaupapa Māori supports and services. This feedback has been supportive of He Ara Āwhina and helpfully identified concepts that could be strengthened or included across both perspectives. What people told us, and the changes made in response, are summarised in 
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He Ara Oranga Inquiry
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Mental Health and Addiction . The catalyst for the inquiry was widespread concern about mental health services, within the mental health sector and the broader community, and calls for a wide-ranging inquiry from service users, their families and whānau, people affected by suicide, people working in
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Assessment of wellbeing for people who interact with mental health and addiction services downloads
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access to the determinants of mental health and wellbeing, including lower household income, fewer social connections, and poorer individual and family and whānau wellbeing. This analysis of quantitative data includes reporting against 22 wellbeing indicators from our He Ara Oranga Wellbeing Outcomes
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Leadership as a mental wellbeing system enabler report downloads
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with lived experience, whānau and populations with specific cultures and needs. Third, we consider what progress had been made to strengthen national, regional and local leadership for mental wellbeing. We use Housing First as a case study, through interviews with Housing First providers across the