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Displaying 61 - 70 results of 135 for "the five basic perspectives that comprise psychological theory are"
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Peer support workforce paper 2023
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peer support and lived experience workforce in enabling recovery, improving hope and in transforming the landscape of mental health and addiction services. The potential of this workforce is yet to be fully realised. Key findings in the paper include: The peer support approach and its values are
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Effectively addressing rising distress in rangatahi and young people
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NewsZealand Health Survey found 1 in 5 of 15–24-year-olds experienced high to very high psychological distress. Primary and specialist mental health and addiction services cannot meet need at this scale. “We know that without easy-to-access support, early distress can lead to long lasting negative
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Acute options for mental health care insights paper
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paper highlights peer-led, community-based, and Kaupapa Māori services as these types of services show positive outcomes and are well received by people who need acute care. These alternative options have some key features that resonate with those with lived experience. Tāngata whaiora felt supported
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Mental health and addiction system
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: Our approach and initial findings report was released in June 2025. Urupare mōrearea: Crisis responses monitoring report This report focuses on crisis responses over a five-year period, from January 2020 to December 2024. Access and choice Our independent reports on the Access and Choice Programme
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Strategy on a page
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deliberation. The Future Excellence Horizon, linked below, provided an external perspective how we could best contribute to improved mental health and wellbeing outcomes. Strategy on a page We are a kaitiaki of mental health and wellbeing. Our objective is to contribute to better and equitable
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Positive progress with targets but challenges remain for young people
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Newsfaced longer wait times than other age groups, and experienced higher rates of declined referrals. For 19-24 years olds, access continued to decrease. “What is equally concerning is that young people are reporting higher levels of psychological distress. “We are also seeing considerable regional
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Our monitoring dashboard
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understanding what is happening in New Zealand’s mental health and addiction system. This dashboard sits alongside He Ara Āwhina monitoring framework and reports. The data is collated by Te Hiringa Mahara about services primarily funded through Vote Health sourced through many agencies. There are 76
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Our commitment to Te Tiriti o Waitangi
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Waitangi Position Statement We acknowledge Te Tiriti o Waitangi as the founding document of Aotearoa New Zealand that allows Government to exercise kāwanatanga in Aotearoa New Zealand. Through our Te Tiriti o Waitangi position statement, we will: Acknowledge the detrimental impact past transgressions
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The future of primary mental health care
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Resourcehealth needs are intertwined, and responses need to be holistic with a wellbeing focus Support empowers people and their whānau A greater focus on social determinants could reduce demand for primary and community health services. Further work to achieve this vision needs to include: Funding and
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Urupare mōrearea: Crisis responses monitoring report | 2025 downloads
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Resourcecrisis response system are often delivered as standalone services or locally driven initiatives. There are proven approaches that need to be scaled-up nationwide, such as 24/7 access to phone-based crisis support, to ensure people get access to crisis support when and where they need it. Our reporting