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Displaying 51 - 60 results of 189 for "data on how many people access pyschological services every year"
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Karen Orsborn: Full impact of COVID-19 on mental health yet to be seen
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Newsof their contracts. This has created an opportunity to provide support to people who may not have received it otherwise. However, while access to specialist services has not changed since the beginning of the pandemic, the Ministry of Health has reported people experiencing increased levels of
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Service monitoring data summaries 2025
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Resourcekey monitoring findings for specialist addiction services, and access to mental health and addiction services. Data reported on includes the number of people accessing addiction specialist services, wait times, workforce, and investment over the five-year period to June 2024. In most cases, they cover
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Home
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Mental health and addiction services access data summary provides updated information on the number of people using services, wait times, workforce, among others. Data presented incorporates data from the most recent year, up to June 2025. Published: 25 February 2026. Find out more 
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2025 monitoring
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about many aspects of Aotearoa New Zealand’s mental health and addiction system. Service monitoring data summaries | May 2025 Two new data summaries provide updated data on access and trends for mental health and addiction services, with the second one focused on addiction specialist services
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New primary mental health and addiction support provides a welcome expansion, but gaps remain – new report
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Newscomplex cases. For example, vacancies rates sit at 22% for psychologists and 19% for psychiatrists. “What we’re seeing is that under-pressure services have constraints on how many people they can see, with some people not meeting the threshold to access specialist services. Some people can get
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Mental health and addiction service monitoring
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, the data covers the five-year period to June 2025. Summary of key findings: More people were able to access services overall, but for 19–24-year-olds, access continued to decrease. People are waiting longer for addiction services than for mental health services. Wait times have improved but declined
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Guide to language in He Ara Āwhina
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Resource, psychiatric diagnosis, addiction, using mental health or addiction supports or services, or experience of barriers to accessing these support and services when they are needed. Lived experience relates to how people self-identify, and share their identity with others, so it is not our role to
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Lived experiences of CCTOs report
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Resourceoverride tāngata whaiora and whānau perspectives. The report also documents how clinical reviews and court hearings marginalise Te Ao Māori and lived experience perspectives. The number of people subjected to a Compulsory Community Treatment Order under the Mental Health Act increased by 8
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Our monitoring dashboard
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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
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Pressure on addiction treatment services highlighted
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Newsin 2019/20 to 8.6% in 2023/24. “A reported surge in methamphetamine use in the last year is likely to put further pressure on services. At a time that we need to be bolstering services, we’re seeing fewer people access addiction services.” “Another sign that the system is under pressure