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Displaying 11 - 20 results of 57 for "nome na base como fazer"
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Official Information Act requests
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. Requestor names, addresses, or contact details will be withheld to maintain privacy. On this page you can download the proactively released responses to Official Information Act requests. Under some circumstances, information that was released to the person who made the original request may be
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Commission responds to Implementation Unit’s mid-term review of 2019 mental health package
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. “We are calling for the Government to urgently invest in and prioritise the expansion of community-based acute mental health support options to help address acute inpatient capacity issues.” he says. “Our wellbeing system needs to be providing community-based therapeutic support and culturally
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Urupare mōrearea: Crisis responses monitoring report
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, we set out the system changes (based on our key findings) that we want to see to improve crisis response pathways for tāngata whaiora and whānau: A well-designed, coordinated national system Crisis responses that are person- and whānau-centred Strengthened system enablers and data insights. Our
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Strategy on a page
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promote alignment, guide the system and influence positive change across the mental health and addiction system. We will also step up into our system leadership role, holding the system to account and influencing the public narrative. Our strategic framework brings the key elements of our strategic
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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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1992 is underway and there is hope that this can take a rights-based approach built in partnership with people. New legislation won’t be transformative by itself, and must be supported by other changes, such as expanding access and increasing choice for mental health and addiction services
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Lived experiences of Compulsory Community Treatment Orders under the Mental Health Act (1992) webinar
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practices under the current Mental Health Act. The Government process to repeal and replace the Act is underway, but it is likely to be years before new legislation is passed and fully implemented. We call for new law, based on supported decision making, embedding Te Tiriti o Waitangi and Te Ao
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Rolling out more options for crisis care
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the following overview of the paper. There is huge potential for more peer-led, community-based and Kaupapa Māori, services to support people experiencing acute distress. Te Hiringa Mahara has brought much needed attention to a wide range of options that haven’t always got the limelight they
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Mental Health Bill
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Download Mental Health Bill submission pdf, 284 KB Since our formation Te Hiringa Mahara - Mental Health and Wellbeing Commission has contributed to policy development to ensure Aotearoa New Zealand has mental health law based on human rights and eliminates coercive practices or reduces them to the
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Chief Executive Karen Orsborn opinion piece on coercive practices
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to coercion despite evidence there is no therapeutic value in such practices. The Mental Health and Wellbeing Commission wants investment that will provide the choice of services needed to enhance everyone's safety, end coercive practices and support whānau to safely navigate through
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Infographic - assessment of youth and rangatahi wellbeing and access to services
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services. Outcomes framework The He Ara Oranga wellbeing outcomes framework presents a set of long-term mental health and wellbeing outcomes, at a population level, based on 'shared' and 'te ao Māori' perspectives. The shared perspective outcomes that we used to assess wellbeing for young people are