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Displaying 21 - 30 results of 75 for "dr sharifa smith"
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Mental health and addiction service monitoring
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No summary available
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Assessment of youth and rangatahi wellbeing and access to services
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of mental health service access was taken from Kua Tìmata Te Haerenga | The Journey Has Begun . The 204 mental health and addiction service monitoring report drew on data from Health NZ, Te Aka Whai Ora, Ministry of Health, Whakarongorau Aotearoa and other agencies. Te Hiringa Mahara prepared
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Strategy on a page
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future. Inform – publish evidence-based insights to drive informed decision-making. Connect – promote alignment and collaboration to effect change. Influence – use our public voice, insights, and recommendations for impact and to hold the system to account. Download our Strategy on a Page (PDF 453KB
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Home
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like, monitoring against six key system shifts to drive real change and deliver better outcomes. Published June 2025. Find out more  He Ara Āwhina dashboard He Ara Āwhina dashboard pulls together data about many aspects of New Zealand’s mental health and addiction services. The most
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Our monitoring dashboard
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Data about mental health and addiction services in Aotearoa New Zealand
Updated 11 June 2025. -
Improving crisis responses - Police and Health NZ change programme webinar
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experience insights and representatives from Health NZ and Police. Te Hiringa Mahara facilitated the webinar, and shared findings from our acute options insights paper along with an introduction to work we are doing on monitoring crisis responses. Our speakers: Dr Leeanne Fisher, National Chief Mental
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He Ara Āwhina development journey
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experience focus groups (from Māori, youth, mental health, addiction, and gambling harm perspectives), targeted discussions, and hui with Māori helped us develop the draft version of He Ara Āwhina. The draft version of He Ara Āwhina went out for public consultation for six weeks from 8 March to 19 April
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Our commitment to lived experience
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us to inform our monitoring, and we talk to people with lived experience when we monitor wellbeing and when we monitor what is happening in the mental health and addiction system Value and utilise lived experience by drawing on lived expertise by drawing on lived experience wisdom. Research
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Pushing ahead with Phase two of the Health NZ and Police mental health response changes
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No summary available
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Rolling out more options for crisis care
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. Alongside traditional inpatient care, there is a wide variety of peer-led, community-based, and Kaupapa Māori approaches we can draw on. Tāngata whaiora (people seeking wellness), have told us that an effective crisis response system has a number of important qualities. They want someone they can call