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Displaying 1 - 10 results of 169 for "made each other test"
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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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He Ara Āwhina framework
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, which is for everyone: Equity Participation and leadership Access and options Safety and rights Connected care Effectiveness These two perspectives work together, for instance, the shared perspective also applies to Māori. They are not direct translations of each other, but weave together reflecting
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Pacific community connections key to wellbeing during COVID-19
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support to each other – support like trustworthy and accessible public health information, access to health care, food and care packages, and spiritual and social help. The lessons learned from Pacific communities' experiences during the pandemic should inform future policies and responses. 
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Assessment of progress - implementation of Kua Tīmata Te Haerenga recommendations downloads
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ensures transparency, acts as a lever for change, and allows people to see the impact from our recommendations. The first recommendations were made in the Kua Tīmata Te Haerenga | The Journey has Begun, monitoring report published in June 2024. These were directed towards Health New Zealand and the
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More investment needed for kaupapa Māori mental health and addiction services
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‘mental disorder’ in any year. However only 11 per cent of current mental health and addiction expenditure is on Kaupapa services,” says Te Hiringa Mahara Board Chair Hayden Wano. “Māori make up 17 per cent of the population and have higher levels of mental distress than other population
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Our commitment to lived experience
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being denied support Treat lived experience as an unfinished sentence, asking ourselves “lived experience of…?” for each project or area of work that we undertake, so that we involve people with directly relevant personal experience in each project Monitoring together – the issues people share with
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Budget 2019 to Budget 2022 investment in mental health and addiction report downloads
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Government’s priority Taking mental health seriously was allocated to each initiative and the expenditure on each of those initiatives for the four years from 1 July 2019 to 30 June 2023. It describes each initiative in terms of what it set out to achieve and its status as of 30 June 2023. The report
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Budget 2019 to Budget 2022 investment report
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Government’s priority Taking mental health seriously was allocated to each initiative and the expenditure on each of those initiatives for the four years from 1 July 2019 to 30 June 2023. It describes each initiative in terms of what it set out to achieve and its status as of 30 June 2023. The report also includes key mental health and addiction initiatives from Budget 2020 to Budget 2022.
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Rolling out more options for crisis care
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respite, and short-stay crisis units are all examples of what could be offered. We list and cite references for more than 20 options in our insights paper. We spotlight the work of Tupu Ake, Te Waka Whaiora Trust, Taranaki Retreat, and Te Puna Wai as examples*. We acknowledge there are other examples
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Our monitoring dashboard
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expresses each system aspiration from both a perspective of Te Ao Māori and a shared perspective, producing 12 domains in total. Through the dashboard we can publish up-to-date data and make it more widely accessible than previously. Using the dashboard The data is presented in an easy-to-use