Search
Displaying 91 - 100 results of 119 for "what does an exclamation mark mean on a hospital wristband"
-
Advancing Māori mental health and wellbeing
Published:
We are an organisation committed to being grounded in Te Tiriti o Waitangi. We have made a strong commitment to achieving better and equitable mental health and wellbeing outcomes for Māori and whānau. This is front and centre of who we are and what we do. Monitoring of Māori and whānau wellbeing
-
Strategy to improve mental health outcomes on the way
Published:
. It is good that this omission has now been rectified. We look forward to working with Minister Doocey and officials on the strategy, to focus effort toward improving mental health and wellbeing outcomes for people with experience of mental distress and addiction. There were some provisions we drew
-
Initial Mental Health and Wellbeing Commission welcomes Mental Health Commissioner’s report on mental health and addiction services
Published:
– progress has been made in response to He Ara Oranga, but there is a lot of work to do before people on the ground can see change.” “He Ara Oranga called upon leaders to transform the mental health and addiction sector so that we’re supporting a wellbeing system – one that responds to peoples’ unique needs
-
Crisis response webinar: what makes an effective crisis response
Published:
literature scan. The session was chaired by Dr Barbara Disley, Te Hiringa Mahara board member. Download the Crisis responses to mental health and/or substance use: What works? A literature scan (August 2025)
-
Could you access mental health or addiction support when you needed it?
Published:
report in mid-2024. We will also be sharing what we heard from people about their experiences and what matters most. Find out more about this project, see our FAQs . Read and download our access to mental health and addiction services documents in alternate formats: Participation Information - Easy
-
Improving crisis responses across Aotearoa New Zealand webinar
Published:
Join us for a webinar to get an overview of how crisis responses are working across Aotearoa New Zealand. Register for the webinar This hour-long session will provide an overview of the recently released Urupare mōrearea: Crisis Responses monitoring report, along with commentary about what a good
-
Time called on compulsory community mental health treatment
Published:
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
-
Te Huringa Tuarua 2023 webinar series
Published:
as three focus reports on kaupapa Māori services, lived experience of Compulsory Community Treatment Orders and admission of young people to adult inpatient services. We also released a report on the peer support workforce. In our webinar series, we focused on: Lived experiences of Compulsory
-
Pushing ahead with Phase two of the Health NZ and Police mental health response changes
Published:
On 8 April the NZ Police and Health NZ made a joint announcement about Mental Health Response Changes. With Phase One complete, the agencies Phase Two will now start from 14 April with both agencies agreeing to a staged implementation across districts. Te Hiringa Mahara has made this
-
Our monitoring dashboard
Published:
visual format. For many of the measures, you can dig deeper and look at measures broken down by demographics or other variables. You can view the dashboard on the webpage (see above), or look at the data in full-screen mode by opening in a new window. We are using Microsoft Power BI to