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Displaying 11 - 20 results of 144 for "building relationship brief explanation"
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International relationships
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Mental health and wellbeing is a global issue and Te Hiringa Mahara connects with commissions and other global entities.
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Our relationships
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Connecting with lived experience communities and tāngata whaiora is crucial if we are going to do our job well – monitoring the mental health and addiction system, contributing to equitable wellbeing for all, and advocating for the changes needed.
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Priority on youth mental health strikes a chord
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peoples’ mental health and wellbeing. The four focus areas for success in the report covers cross government action, strengthening the service delivery system, building an evidence base and youth voice. “Calling for the voices of young people to be heard in service policy and delivery echo what we
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Rolling out more options for crisis care
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Taranaki Retreat put it “A supportive relationship is formed, in which the safety valve of a listener to both reflect and turn to, is available to them to make positive steps for change.” When power is shared with tāngata whaiora so is the accountability for their choices. Tāngata whaiora from the
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Leadership
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commitment of Te Hiringa Mahara to being grounded in Te Tiriti o Waitangi (Te Tiriti). She leads the design and development of a Te Tiriti framework and implementation plan, building on Te Tiriti Position Statement to drive and inform all the functions of Te Hiringa Mahara. Authentic Te Tiriti partnerships
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COVID-19 learnings can support communities recovering from Cyclone Gabrielle
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crises. It will also provide a safety net for some of our most vulnerable. “To help impacted communities during and beyond the recovery, we call on the government to continue to work with iwi and community organisations; to prioritise investment in re-building social
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Covid-19 Insights Series - Exercising rangatiratanga during the COVID-19 pandemic
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relationships; and were agile and adaptive. Māori-led initiatives shared culturally-appropriate information and resources that protected the health and wellbeing of communities; and supported connection with individuals and whānau. For improved future health and wellbeing outcomes, we recommend
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Acute options for mental health care insights paper
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about risk and safety in collaboration with them. These services provided a gateway to other services when required and were most effective when they had strong relationships with local clinical services and crisis teams. Increasing the range of acute services can relieve some of the pressure that
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Mental health and addiction targets welcomed
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help and their whānau. These targets will help focus effort on making sure services are available,” says Mental Health and Wellbeing Commission Board chair Hayden Wano. “In our briefing to incoming Ministers we made a strong case for mental health and addiction targets to be developed, so it is
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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