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Displaying 1 - 10 results of 186 for "p 4/5"
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Board meetings
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The Board meets regularly. After each Board meeting, we publish a Board meeting summary so that people can find out more about Te Hiringa Mahara and its work programme. Download our Board meeting summaries below 2024 meeting summaries Meeting 44 - 5 December [PDF, 172KB] Meeting 43 - 24
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Leadership as a mental wellbeing system enabler report
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on the determinants of mental wellbeing, prioritising people with high and unmet needs. At the same time, invest in the future to: 4. Make destigmatisation training and education on the role and value of lived experience widely available for the health workforce and other agencies
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Infographic - assessment of youth and rangatahi wellbeing and access to services
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New Zealand cross-sectional surveys. Australian & New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry 57(2) 264–282 3. Stats NZ (2024) Household living-costs price indexes: December 2023 quarter. 4. We defined LGBTQIA+ as survey respondents who identified as having a sexuality that was not heterosexual, a gender
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Te Huringa Tuarua 2023 webinar series
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NewsCommunity Treatment Orders under the Mental Health Act 1992 webinar When: 12:00pm-12:45pm Thursday, 28 September 2023 Pathway for peer support to transform the mental health and addiction workforce webinar When: 12:00pm-12:45pm Thursday, 5 October 2023 Mental health and addiction service use – what the
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Improve wellbeing for rangatahi Māori and young people
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The mental health and wellbeing of rangatahi Māori and young people is one of the most important issues we can focus on today. More needs to be done to support rangatahi Māori and young peoples’ mental health and wellbeing. What are we advocating for? Rangatahi Māori and young people must
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Our commitment to lived experience
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both for Te Hiringa Mahara and for other organisations working in mental health, addiction and broader wellbeing. Read and download our Nau Mai te Ao discussion document Nau Mai te Ao discussion document [PDF 4.8MB] Nau Mai te Ao discussion document [DOCX 506KB]
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Young people experiencing acute mental distress need age-appropriate care
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NewsToo many young people experiencing acute mental distress are being admitted to adult inpatient mental health services, and this practice needs to stop. This is according to today’s Te Hiringa Mahara – the Mental Health and Wellbeing Commission report Te Huringa Tuarua 2023: Youth services focus
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Prioritising youth voices necessary to improve wellbeing
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NewsThe mental health and wellbeing of rangatahi Māori and young people is one of the most important issues we can focus on today. We only need to acknowledge increasing levels of distress, and the many well-known barriers to wellbeing, to understand that much more needs to be done to support young
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Contact us
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Wellbeing Commission in performing its functions and exercising its powers, under the Mental Health and Wellbeing Commission Act 2020, is to contribute to better and equitable mental health and wellbeing outcomes for people in Aotearoa New Zealand. Our Transparency Statement [PDF, 45 KB] explains how we
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Pressure on addiction treatment services highlighted
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News/24, around 45,000 people accessed addiction treatment services, 5,000 fewer than five years earlier. Referrals have also dropped, down 14.6% in 2023/24 compared with the peak in 2020/21. And the percentage of declined referrals has almost doubled over the last five years from 4.7% of total referrals