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Displaying 21 - 30 results of 144 for "funding"
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Te Huringa: Mental Health and Addiction Service Monitoring Reports 2022
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Key information Te Huringa 2022 was our first mental health services and addiction services monitoring report. It shows the performance of mental health services and addiction services between 2016-2017 and 2020-2021. The report covers mental health services and addiction services funded by the
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Guide to language in He Ara Āwhina
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conditions or disabilities. Individualised funding and whānau funding models Where funding is given directly to tāngata whaiora or to whānau (rather than to service providers), so people can choose the supports and services they want to meet their individual or whānau needs or aspirations
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Pathway for peer support to transform the mental health and addiction workforce webinar
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and DHB sector, including General Manager of mental health for Counties Manukau DHB. She has also had senior management roles in public health, women’s health, and child health, and executive roles in strategic planning and funding in Australia and Aotearoa. Angela Boswell, Senior Policy Advisor
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Increasing service options for Māori webinar
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kōwhiringa ratonga mā te Māori. Despite funding increases over the past five years, more needs to be done to achieve equitable funding in kaupapa Māori mental health and addiction services. This is to ensure that the support available meets the level of mental distress experienced by Māori within
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Mental health and addiction service monitoring
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collection of quality and timely data. Government commits to funding a planned programme of work to collect mental health and addiction prevalence data by June 2025, to enable improved services and ensure value for money. The report is supported by: a Voices report (thematic analysis of
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Collective effort will ensure Auditor General’s recommendations on mental health support for rangatahi and young people hit the mark
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that will deliver for rangatahi and young people.” “The emphasis on the agencies that plan and fund services working together is the key to untapping collective effort that will make real change.” The Auditor General highlights how tailoring support to the specific needs of young people helps
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Lived experiences of Compulsory Community Treatment Orders under the Mental Health Act (1992) webinar
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public health, women’s health, and child health, and executive roles in strategic planning and funding in Australia and Aotearoa. Alison Schneller, Principal Advisor Mental Health and Addiction Sector At Te Hiringa Mahara, Alison has a particular focus on advocating for the collective
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Hauora hinengaro: He ara tūroa: Mental Health: An enduring pathway conference 2025
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advocate on the continued improvement of mental health care. The conference provides the opportunity to bring together a forum of national and international experience and expertise including te ao Māori (Māori world views), lived/living experience, clinical, funder and systems thinking perspectives
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Leadership as a mental wellbeing system enabler report downloads
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country as well as government officials who support, oversee, and fund those projects. Downloads Leadership as a mental wellbeing system enabler report pdf, 2.2 MB Download Leadership as a mental wellbeing system enabler report docx, 4.8 MB Download Kia Manawanui arataki pūrongo - Te Reo Māori whakarāpopoto pdf, 398 KB Download
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Report signals progress of Government’s response to He Ara Oranga, the inquiry into mental health and addiction
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more people and there are pockets of success and innovation to expand access and increase choice for mental health and addiction services. However, funding mechanisms have not changed enough to support a partnership approach, which would see priority populations co-design services from the beginning