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Displaying 161 - 170 results of 192 for "kaupapa maori support services"
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Pacific people's wellbeing - the path to equitable outcomes webinar
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Te Hiringa Mahara and Le Va co-hosted a webinar on supporting Pacific people's wellbeing in Aotearoa. The webinar shared and expanded on the findings of our Pacific wellbeing report which was released in May 2024. The report brought together an assessment of Pacific peoples mental health
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Pacific community connections key to wellbeing during COVID-19
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key feature in the how Pacific community responses served to support families and helped mitigate the challenges,” says Te Hiringa Mahara Chief Executive Karen Orsborn. Pacific peoples endured significant challenges in the pandemic, and this included serious disruption to the ways
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Covid-19 Insights Series - Pacific connectedness and wellbeing in the pandemic
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, and this included serious disruption to the ways they connect with family, community, church, and culture. However, throughout the worse periods of the pandemic, Pacific people drew on their connections to provide flexible and practical support to each other – support like trustworthy and
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NZ Health Survey 2024/2025 mental health and substance use data summary
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group. 23.8% of Pacific adults (about 69,000 people) and 22.5% of Māori adults (about 147,000 people) experienced high or very high psychological distress. Both Pacific and Māori were significantly more likely to have high or very high psychological distress than non-Pacific and non-Māori respectively
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More deliberate focus needed to ensure all people in Aotearoa experience good wellbeing
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young people, veterans, rainbow communities, Māori, Pacific peoples, former refugees and migrants, children in state care, older people, rural communities, disabled people, prisoners, and children experiencing adverse childhood events, looked at felt life is less worthwhile, and reported less
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Mental health and addiction system performance monitoring report | 2025 downloads
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lived and living experience Prioritises effective services for tāngata whaiora with highest need Provides effective primary prevention and early interventions Ensures accessible and effective services Upholds human rights-based practices Is supported by a workforce with the capability, competencies and
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Monitoring 2026 landing page
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In February 2026 we published a data summary that looks at access to specialist mental health, substance use and addiction services (see link below). We have also published relevant population level findings on mental health and substance use from the NZ Health Survey 2024/2025 . Monitoring work
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Assessment of wellbeing for people who interact with mental health and addiction services downloads
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Our first assessment comparing status of wellbeing for people who interact with mental health and addiction services reveals significant inequities across economic, social and cultural indicators. People who interact with mental health and addiction services experience systemic disadvantage in
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Accountability documents
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. We are guided by our commitment to people with lived and living experience, Māori and other priority populations, alongside whānau and those who support tangata whaiora. Annual report 2023 - 2024 [PDF 1.1MB] Annual Report 2022 - 2023 Our third annual report, which
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Mental health and addiction service use – what the data shows webinar
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mental health and addiction services. This report monitors publicly health-funded mental health and addiction services over the five-year period from 2017/18 to 2021/22, using a broad suite of data. In this webinar, we shared selected findings from this report about changes in mental health and