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Displaying 121 - 130 results of 219 for "Perspectives in Social Work"
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Access to specialist mental health and addiction services continues to decrease
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Tīmata Te Haerenga service monitoring report. We found that this was not due to a decrease in need for specialist services, but largely due to significant workforce shortages and increasing complexity of people’s needs. In June 2024, the Commission made a set of recommendations for urgent action by
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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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Young people are missing out on access to mental health services
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addiction care when they need it,” said Karen Orsborn, Chief Executive. “We’ve got to ensure young people know where to seek help and when they do, there is capacity and workforce available to respond in a way that works for them and their circumstances. This means help is available early, with a range
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Home
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Better mental health and wellbeing for our people Te Hiringa Mahara - Mental Health and Wellbeing Commission is a kaitiaki of mental health and wellbeing. We contribute to better and equitable mental health and wellbeing outcomes for all people in Aotearoa New Zealand. Our work News and resources
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Relationships and engagements
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Reo Māori - Māori Language Commission's "Te Mahere Reo" requirements. Whāinga Amorangi is a cross-agency work programme designed to lift the Māori Crown relations capability of the public service. As part of its mahi to support the Crown in its Treaty obligations, Te Arawhiti created Whāinga
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Holding a mirror up to the mental health and addiction system
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people expect.” “Peer support services for example have seen an increase since 2018 with greater investment in the peer and lived experience workforce. There has also been an increase in kaupapa Māori specialist mental health and addiction services since 2018, but this has yet to reach
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New primary mental health and addiction support provides a welcome expansion, but gaps remain – new report
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everyone requiring a higher level of care gets the support they need. Focused attention is now required on addressing this problem.” The report shows mounting pressure on specialist services. This is primarily related to acute workforce shortages in specialist services and is compounded by having more
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Official Information Act requests
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spending on public relations and communications support OIA response [PDF, 289KB] FTEs and job losses Date published: 20 June 2024 Response date: 2 May 2024 View/download PDF: MHWC2024-005 - FTEs and job losses OIA response [PDF 436KB] Information on employee working arrangements Date published: 8
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Mental health and addiction targets welcomed
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The announcement of targets to address wait times and workforce pressures across the mental health and addiction system has been welcomed by Te Hiringa Mahara – Mental Health and Wellbeing Commission. “Access to appropriate services when and where they are needed is very important to people seeking
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Time called on compulsory community mental health treatment
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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