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Displaying 1 - 10 results of 34 for "right supraclavicular node"
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Access and Choice programme
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Updated: April 2025
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Governance
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Meet the Te Hiringa Mahara Board.
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Mental Health Bill
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Download Mental Health Bill submission pdf, 284 KB Since our formation the 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 greatest extent possible. We submitted on
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Mental health and addiction service monitoring
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No summary available
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Pacific people's wellbeing - the path to equitable outcomes webinar
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Watch the recording from the 8 August 2024 webinar we co-hosted with Le Va.
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Mental health and addiction targets welcomed
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The announcement of targets to address wait times and workforce pressures across the mental health and addiction system has been welcomed by Te Hiringa Mahara – Mental Health and Wellbeing Commission.
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Guide to language in He Ara Āwhina
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The most important terms in He Ara Āwhina are explained here, along with complex terms that are not ‘everyday language’.
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Independent Commission’s report highlights the importance of improving access and choice for mental health and addiction services in Aotearoa
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to see that momentum continue and expand, so everyone can have a choice of primary mental health, wellbeing, and addiction services that is right for them, and people can access services where and when they are needed.”
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Covid-19 Insights Series - Impact of COVID-19 on the wellbeing of rural communities in Aotearoa New Zealand
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February 2023 - Our third report in the COVID-19 insights series shows that rural communities face different wellbeing challenges to urban Aotearoa, and the pandemic has presented a range of added stresses.
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Time called on compulsory community mental health treatment
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Orders report documents how tāngata whaiora, whānau and family, and Māori feel marginalised in processes that determine what treatment they receive. “The use of compulsory community treatment orders is a practice from mental health that is out of step with human rights and current approaches to