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Displaying 11 - 20 results of 84 for "wanted dead or alive robert jeffress"
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Accountability documents
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download. We are excited to share our performance story and look forward to a future where people who experience mental distress or addiction, and their whānau, their broader supports and their advocates, have the support they need, when they need it. Annual Report 2021 - 2022 [PDF 8 MB]  
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He Ara Āwhina framework
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, people with Lived Experience, people who work in, support whānau with, or personally experience alcohol or other drug harm, gambling harm or addiction. and the Shared perspective. Read and download our He Ara Āwhina (pathways to support) framework [PDF 3.1 MB] Our Goal: a whānau-dynamic mental
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Mental health and addiction system performance monitoring report | 2025 downloads
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mental health and addiction system to realise the vision set out in He Ara Oranga. All six shifts are grounded in the experience of people with living and lived experience of mental distress and addictions. The shifts call for a mental health and addiction system that: Realises the potential of
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Access and Choice programme
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levels of need experienced by these population groups. There has been high uptake of services, with rangatahi and young people making up 20% of people accessing the Access and Choice Programme and Māori making up 27%. We outline the changes we want to see and make three recommendations. These
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Get involved
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Tiriti o Waitangi and working in partnership with Māori as tangata whenua. We want our workforce to reflect our communities across Aotearoa and are actively seeking applications from people who represent that diversity. You can find out more about you can apply your skills and experience to our
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Commission will provide system oversight of new mental wellbeing long-term pathway
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, and bringing focus to the right things, meaningful change can happen on the ground.” Hayden Wano says the Commission Board has been calling for a clear implementation plan for the direction set by He Ara Oranga and wants to see five critical areas prioritised: upholding Te Tiriti o Waitangi and
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Chief Executive Karen Orsborn opinion piece on coercive practices
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experience of mental distress want options for getting through crises at home or in welcoming, warm, home-like settings. We are already seeing great examples of innovative services for people experiencing high levels of distress, such as peer-led acute services, after-hours drop-in spaces, whānau-led wānanga
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Make a complaint about us
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complaint, please tell us: your name your home address and / or email address, depending on how you want us to contact you your contact phone number details about your complaint. We will only use your contact details so that we can respond directly to you. We will hold your personal information in
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Mental Health Bill
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people’s rights, will and preferences, to make decisions about their care. Shifting to supported decision making The Bill does not go far enough to enable the shifts in practice we want to see lead to better outcomes for people. The Bill’s second half retains substituted decision-making roles
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Work with us
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are committed to being grounded in Te Tiriti o Waitangi and working in partnership with Māori as tangata whenua. We want our workforce to reflect our communities across Aotearoa and are actively seeking applications from people who represent that diversity. Te Hiringa Mahara also welcomes and supports