Search
Displaying 1 - 10 results of 100 for "don't eat red meat for a few months"
-
Access to specialist mental health and addiction services continues to decrease
Published:
. “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
-
Mental health and addiction specialist service access factsheet download
Published:
2024, in line with the best practice of waiting 3 months or more from reference year end. Download Access to specialist mental health and addiction services, 2023/24 factsheet pdf, 342 KB Download Related works Find all of our service monitoring products released in 2025.
-
Accountability documents
Published:
first annual report, which covers our first months of operation in the 2020/21 financial year from 9 February 2021 to 30 June 2021, is available to download. We are proud of what we were able to achieve in the first few months. In sharing our early performance story with you, we also acknowledge the
-
Report signals progress of Government’s response to He Ara Oranga, the inquiry into mental health and addiction
Published:
, it presents challenges and opportunities for the mental health and wellbeing system." "We would like to encourage the system to pause, reflect and embrace the strengths that emerged in the last few months, such as collaboration, high trust and a shared understanding of need and outcomes. Our response to COVID-19 has shown that together, we can achieve great things. Let’s not lose this,” says Mr Wano. You can read the report on our website .
-
Infographic - assessment of youth and rangatahi wellbeing and access to services
Published:
question: ‘Compared to 12 months ago, overall, would you say that things are currently better, worse or about the same for your whānau Indicators and Data How we assessed the mental health and wellbeing of young people and rangatahi Māori Drawing on expert advice, we selected a set of 30 youth-relevant
-
Governance
Published:
Health and Wellbeing Commission. Over the past few years Barbara has been a Gateway Reviewer for the New Zealand Treasury. She is Chair of the Global Leaders Exchange for mental health and disability. She has a doctorate in education from Macquarie University Sydney and in 2011 was
-
Our work
Published:
Lived Experience Learn about our commitment to being an advocate for communities with lived experience of mental distress and addiction. Advocacy Learn about our advocacy work. Mental Health and Addiction System Learn about how we independently monitor, assess, report and share findings on mental
-
Improve wellbeing for rangatahi and young people
Published:
The mental health and wellbeing of rangatahi Māori and young people is one of the most important issues we can focus on today. More needs to be done to support rangatahi and young peoples’ mental health and wellbeing. What are we advocating for? Rangatahi Māori and young people must have a
-
Pressure on addiction treatment services highlighted
Published:
New analysis shows a 10.5% reduction in the number of people accessing addiction treatment services over the last five years raising concerns about whether there is sufficient capacity to respond to an increase in demand. “Recent reports show drug use has increased, yet over the past five
-
Te Huringa Tuarua: Mental Health and Addiction Service Monitoring Reports 2023
Published:
This mental health and addiction service monitoring report is the main report that monitors across the breadth of national-level data. It aims to show what is working well and what isn’t in mental health and addiction services, how this has changed over time, and advocate for improvements. This