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Displaying 41 - 50 results of 208 for "lion d'or 鬼怒川"
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Wellbeing
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among young people and rangatahi Māori uses He Ara Oranga and He Ara Āwhina frameworks. COVID-19 insight series We published eight short reports during 2022 and 2023 to add our collective understanding of the wellbeing impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic. Leadership as a mental wellbeing system enabler
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Current vacancies
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and supporting the Chief Executive and Directors to support the organisation to be a bolder advocate, publicly holding to account and keeping the spotlight on mental health and wellbeing. Being part of a small team, this position gives you the opportunity to operate across all facets of
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Governance
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published in the government gazette . Our Board must make sure that it effectively seeks and understands the views of Māori as tangata whenua, of people with lived experience of mental distress or addiction (or both) and the people who support them, as well as Pacific people, and other groups and
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Urupare mōrearea: Crisis responses monitoring report
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Download the report Urupare mōrearea: Crisis responses monitoring report | 2025 downloads Download Urupare mōrearea: Crisis responses monitoring report. Report Watch our webinars Improving crisis responses across Aotearoa New Zealand webinar Watch the recording of a webinar providing an overview of
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Infographic - assessment of youth and rangatahi wellbeing and access to services
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Māori expressed optimism about whānau wellbeing. Youth access to mental health and addiction services The He Ara Oranga framework describes what wellbeing looks like for people and whānau in Aotearoa New Zealand, at a population level, while He Ara Āwhina describes an ideal mental health and
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Have your say
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Te Hiringa Mahara aims to hear and reflect the voices of communities, people with lived experience of distress or addiction, whānau and supporters, and groups who experience greater barriers to wellbeing. We are committed to prioritising the aspirations of tāngata whaiora and tāngata mātau-ā-wheako
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Our relationships
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Connecting with lived experience communities and tāngata whaiora is crucial if we are going to do our job well – monitoring the mental health and addiction system, contributing to equitable wellbeing for all, and advocating for the changes needed. We are growing our connections with lived
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Crisis response literature scan downloads
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This crisis response literature scan reviews international and Aotearoa evidence on crisis responses for the general population, Indigenous communities, and youth. It highlights shared principles, key differences, and what is working well. The scan finds that international system-wide models show
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Working paper: Review of suicide and self-harm monitoring indicators downloads
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of suicide and self-harm measures that will be incorporated into the Commission’s ongoing independent monitoring and reporting. Five high level ‘outcome’ measures will be included in our annual system performance monitoring. Monitoring data we draw on will be available from late 2025 and will be
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Work with us
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This is a great time to join us and play a key role in supporting us as we assess and report on progress with system transformation, monitor mental health and addiction services, and advocate for the collective interests of people with lived experience of mental distress and/or addiction. We are