Search
Displaying 51 - 60 results of 142 for "Kaupap+maori+services"
-
Te Ao Māori
Published:
Our commitment to Te Tiriti o Waitangi Learn more about our commitment to Te Tiriti o Waitangi. Relationships and engagements Learn more about our relationship and engagement with Māori communities, systems and services. Advancing Māori mental health Find more information about the work that we do, including reports, about advancing Māori mental health.
-
Our monitoring dashboard
Published:
This dashboard pulls together data about many aspects of New Zealand’s mental health and addiction services. This includes a wide range of measures covering primary and specialist services, including community and inpatient services. The dashboard is available for use by anyone interested in
-
Time called on compulsory community mental health treatment
Published:
CCTO continue to live at home and are still able to work or study. “We were told forced treatment can have a negative impact on peoples’ trust in and engagement with services. This is the opposite of what is needed to facilitate recovery,” Mr Wano said. The number of people
-
Access and Choice programme 2025 report webinar
Published:
increased access to support, however efforts to reach the aim of 325,000 people accessing services needs to be intensified. Our expert panel discussed their experiences with the programme from the perspectives of lived experience, Kaupapa Māori services, and the workforce.  
-
Kua Tīmata Te Haerenga | The Journey Has Begun report downloads
Published:
and download four infographics with key data and insights on Kaupapa Māori services, Reducing coercive practices, Youth and rangatahi wellbeing and access to services, and a monitoring overview. Updated online He Ara Āwhina monitoring dashboard Downloads Kua Timata Te Haerenga report - June 2024
-
Lived experiences of Compulsory Community Treatment Orders under the Mental Health Act (1992) webinar
Published:
Kupenga Net Trust in Tairāwhiti as an adult peer support/advocacy worker, Consumer Leader, and Mataora. Guy was privileged to carry the voices of whānau to local, regional, and national forums where he was a Co-Chair of Ngā Hau e Whā (National Consumer Advocacy Group) and become a member of the National Association of Mental Health Services Consumer Advisors (NAMHSCA) prior to joining Te Hiringa Mahara in 2022.
-
More deliberate focus needed to ensure all people in Aotearoa experience good wellbeing
Published:
young people, veterans, rainbow communities, Māori, Pacific peoples, former refugees and migrants, children in state care, older people, rural communities, disabled people, prisoners, and children experiencing adverse childhood events, looked at felt life is less worthwhile, and reported less
-
Stronger more inclusive health sector means better health and wellbeing for all
Published:
the design, planning, management and delivery of hauora hinengaro and mental health services, iwi and Māori must be the major decision-makers of their care.” Commission Board member Taimi Allan also called for a supporting Mental Health and Wellbeing Strategy to put more focus on mental health
-
Peer mental support role in EDs is a positive move
Published:
The announcement today by the Minister for Mental Health Matt Doocey that a new mental health and addiction peer support service will be set up in hospital emergency departments is a positive move. “People who are experiencing mental distress who arrive at an emergency department will
-
Access and choice mental health programme stacks up
Published:
improved access to primary mental health care. It includes specific services to meet the needs of rangatahi and young people, Māori and Pacific peoples. This is in line with levels of need experienced by these population groups. One marker of need is rates of moderate levels psychological distress. This