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Displaying 1 - 10 results of 244 for "Số: 250/2025/NĐ-CP"
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Expansion of mental health crisis support services welcomed
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Newsto, and the timeframes. In our monitoring role we will keep a close eye on this," Te Hiringa Mahara CE Karen Orsborn said. “We know that peer workers and cultural workforces can play a bigger role drawing on their lived experience. This is something we have been calling for so we are very pleased to
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Our commitment to lived experience
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, methodologies, practices, lived experience roles, social movements, and leadership Prioritise our projects and focus areas based on their importance to people with lived experience. Read and download our Lived Experience Position Statement Lived Experience Position Statement (A3 poster), July 2025 (PDF
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Our relationships
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experience networks, organisations and people, and are grateful for the contributions that lived experience groups have made to our work so far. Some of the ways that tāngata whaiora and lived experience groups can be involved in our work include: meeting with us kanohi ki te kanohi (face to face) or online
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We asked what happened with our recommendations? Here’s what we found out
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NewsJune 2024, which included four recommendations for Health NZ and one recommendation for the government to be achieved by 30 June 2025. We know our stakeholders including tāngata whaiora and those with lived experience want to see the impact and influence our work has in creating change, so in recent
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Guide to language in He Ara Āwhina
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Resourcepeople are forced or pressured to do something. This can include forced medication, solitary confinement, forced electroconvulsive therapy, physical restraint, mechanical restraint, and environmental restraint such as locked units. Coercive practises also include influencing decision making in a
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Access and Choice programme
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Access and Choice Programme report 2025 downloads Download the full Access and Choice Programme: Monitoring report on progress and achievements at five years, Kaupapa Māori primary mental health services infographic, summary and literature scan. Report Access and Choice Programme report webinar On
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He Ara Āwhina development journey
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Resourcemeasures paper - May 2024 (PDF 424KB) Discontinued measures paper - May 2024 (Word 2.4MB) Added measures 2025 We continue to refine the measure set to ensure it remains relevant and current to monitor mental health and addiction services. We made some additions to the He Ara Āwhina measure set in 2024
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Access to specialist mental health and addiction services continues to decrease
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News. “Rangatahi and young people aged under 25 make up over 10,000 of the 16,000 fewer people being seen. This requires urgent attention.” “We want to see improved access so people get timely support when they need it.” The reasons behind a reduction in access to services were reported in our 2024 Kua
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Age-ban on social media can’t solve mental distress on its own
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Newsenvironment, as we work to foster healthy and sustainable digital environments for our rangatahi and young people. (First published on 5 March 2026) Read our submission to the Education and Workforce Select Committee Inquiry into the harm young New Zealanders encounter online, and the roles that Government, business, and society should play in addressing those harms (July 2025) (PDF 1.7MB)
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2024 service monitoring infographics
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Resourceinfographic provides an update to this quantitative data one year on – up to June 2023 – to observe what has changed and where further work is needed. We also include some of the findings for Māori from our recent monitoring report Kua Tīmata Te Haerenga | The Journey has Begun. Published: July 2024