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Displaying 1 - 10 results of 198 for "function of the right atrium"
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The Initial Commission
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, but not all, of the functions of Te Hiringa Mahara. The Initial Commission's work Mā Te Rongo Ake / through listening and learning (PDF 7.6MB) , a report from the Initial Commission assessing progress of the government’s response to He Ara Oranga, the inquiry into mental health and addiction, was
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Contact us
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collect, use and share information about members of the public or other entities (directly or indirectly) in accordance with the Information Gathering and Public Trust standards. This includes the functions of Te Hiringa Mahara. Concerns or complaints If you have concerns about the work of the Te
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Crisis response literature scan downloads
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are timely, non-coercive, culturally safe, and connected to wider systems of care, ensuring tāngata whaiora and whānau receive the right support at the right time. This literature scan forms part the ongoing Te Hiringa Mahara work programme examining effective crisis response systems. We will be
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Commission responds to Implementation Unit’s mid-term review of 2019 mental health package
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used. The right workforce and staffing levels are also key to ensuring that inpatient facilities can optimise the number of acute beds available at any given time. “Inpatient facilities are only part of the equation. As a nation, we need to keep having the wider
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System performance monitoring report - June 2025
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supported by the right workforce. Our initial monitoring findings show that while there are some early positive movements in some areas, for example peer support workforce, overall, there is a system under significant pressure. Collective and coordinated action across the system shifts is required . This is our first system performance monitoring report and we will expand and improve the set of measures used in coming years.
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Top priorities for New Zealand's first Minister for Mental Health
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? The COVID-19 pandemic, the increasingly severe natural disasters and the cost of living crisis has led to mounting concerns about whether services are readily available. Mental health is more visible than ever before, and not always for the right reasons. What we need
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Mental Health and Wellbeing Commission welcomes Budget 2022 investment in specialist mental health and addiction services
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move in the right direction towards addressing issues raised in our recent Te Huringa report and transforming the system toward the vision of He Ara Oranga. The focus of this investment is aligned with the voices of Māori and tāngata whaiora (people with lived experience of distress and addiction
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More kaupapa Māori services
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options for non-Māori. We are already seeing changes, but we need to see more Currently, Access and Choice allocates 20% of ringfenced funding for Kaupapa Māori services, which is heading in the right direction. Increases in future years for Kaupapa Māori services will contribute significantly towards
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Who we are
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from the government of the day. An Initial Commission was set-up in November 2019 to start on high priority projects and begin setting up the new organisation. The Mental Health and Wellbeing Commission Act 2020 was passed in June 2020, and we began to fulfil our new legislative functions in
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Pushing ahead with Phase two of the Health NZ and Police mental health response changes
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statement in response to planned changes. People in acute mental health distress need access to the services and help they need in a timely way. Strengthening the health led crisis responses is the right direction to head. We are keeping a close eye on the implementation of changes being made by NZ