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Displaying 1 - 10 results of 215 for "what are hospital based services for mental health"
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Improve wellbeing for rangatahi Māori and young people
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across all districts, including Kaupapa Māori services, residential alternatives to hospital based inpatient mental health care and short-term respite care. Why is this important? Rates of distress for rangatahi Māori and young people have increased over the last ten years, and more needs to be done to
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Young people experiencing acute mental distress need age-appropriate care
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News. “Young people have told us they want to see a wider range of options to address youth distress across Aotearoa. This includes more age-appropriate community-based services and alternatives to hospital based inpatient mental health care; kaupapa Māori options to meet the needs of rangatahi Māori; and
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New Mental Health Bill - are we there yet?
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Newsvitally important we continue to learn from people with first-hand experience of the Mental Health Act 1992. Their insights, ideas and approaches have potential to move us forward on pathways that are rights-based and offer safe alternatives to the use of coercive practices – they can guide both the
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Youth services focus report
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ResourceMāori services - residential alternatives to hospital based inpatient mental health care and short-term respite care. These services can provide appropriate treatment, and a supportive culture, where young people are safe and have hope for the future. Watch our New Zealand Sign Language summary
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Advocacy
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and addiction services Approaches to mental health and wellbeing. We are prioritising three focus areas for our advocacy: Transforming from a coercive to a choice-based system Improving mental health and wellbeing for rangatahi and young people More Kaupapa Māori services. We cannot advocate
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Acute options for mental health care insights paper downloads
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Resourceof acute services Current picture of service access Visions for acute care Evidence of what works Examples that demonstrate the success and benefits of alternative models to acute inpatient care. Downloads Acute options for mental health care insights paper pdf, 1.1 MB Download Acute options for mental health care insights paper docx, 5.8 MB Download
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Peer mental support role in EDs is a positive move
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NewsThe announcement today by the Minister for Mental Health Matt Doocey that a new mental health and addiction peer support service will be set up in hospital emergency departments is a positive move. “People who are experiencing mental distress who arrive at an emergency department will
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Urupare mōrearea: Crisis responses monitoring report
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evenings and weekends. 2. Health NZ to progress shorter-term actions by 30 June 2026: enable nationwide access to 24/7 phone-based crisis support develop clear, consistent pathways to crisis services from primary care evaluate the outcomes and impact of peer support in ED and crisis cafés. Published: November 2025
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New primary mental health and addiction support provides a welcome expansion, but gaps remain – new report
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Newsaccessing specialist mental health and addiction services has decreased over a five-year time frame. In 2022/23, 3.4% of the population accessed a specialist service, a decrease from 3.8% in 2018/19. This is a drop of 9,000 people using these services. Of those seeking specialist support the decrease for
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Priority on youth mental health strikes a chord
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Newspeoples’ mental health and wellbeing. The four focus areas for success in the report covers cross government action, strengthening the service delivery system, building an evidence base and youth voice. “Calling for the voices of young people to be heard in service policy and delivery echo what we