Search
Displaying 131 - 137 results of 137 for "can you use an iphone without an apple id"
-
Covid-19 Insights Series - COVID-19 and safety in the home
Published:
, and grow more severe Women, children, and young people, particularly those who are Māori, or from the rainbow community, were particularly affected. Digital technology allowed online violence and abuse to be brought directly into people’s homes, but the digital divide made accessing help difficult for
-
Pathway for peer support to transform the mental health and addiction workforce webinar
Published:
Watch our second recording in the Te Huringa Tuarua webinar series - 5 October 2023. Find out how we can realise the potential of the peer support workforce in Aotearoa New Zealand. We released our peer support workforce insights paper in June this year. This paper brings
-
More investment needed for kaupapa Māori mental health and addiction services
Published:
use of commissioning approaches that acknowledge the principles of mana motuhake and tino rangatiratanga.” Focus groups who contributed to the research said they hoped to see more holistic services that span the life course, from the “crib to the tomb”, for tāngata whaiora and their whānau
-
Young people experiencing acute mental distress need age-appropriate care
Published:
Too many young people experiencing acute mental distress are being admitted to adult inpatient mental health services, and this practice needs to stop. This is according to today’s Te Hiringa Mahara – the Mental Health and Wellbeing Commission report Te Huringa Tuarua 2023: Youth services focus
-
Lived experiences of Compulsory Community Treatment Orders under the Mental Health Act (1992) webinar
Published:
Treatment Orders under the Mental Health (Compulsory Assessment and Treatment) Act 1992. In this report, we intentionally bring forward the views of tāngata whaiora Māori, people with lived experience, family, and whānau related to the Compulsory Community Treatment Order process. The
-
He Ara Oranga Inquiry
Published:
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
-
Te Hiringa Mahara welcomes Health Quality and Safety Commission report on the mental health impacts of COVID-19 on Aotearoa
Published:
Te Hiringa Mahara Chief Executive Karen Orsborn has welcomed today’s release of the second report of the Health Quality and Safety Commission (the Commission) on the impact of COVID-19 on health with its dedicated chapter on the impacts on people’s mental health and use of mental health