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Displaying 21 - 30 results of 87 for "what language did old china speak"
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Te Huringa Tuarua 2023 webinar series
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NewsCommunity Treatment Orders under the Mental Health Act 1992 webinar When: 12:00pm-12:45pm Thursday, 28 September 2023 Pathway for peer support to transform the mental health and addiction workforce webinar When: 12:00pm-12:45pm Thursday, 5 October 2023 Mental health and addiction service use – what the
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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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Guide to language in He Ara Āwhina
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ResourceThe most important terms in He Ara Āwhina are explained here, along with complex terms that are not ‘everyday language’. We have also included words that people told us needed more explanation during our public consultation on the draft He Ara Āwhina framework. Where we have made use of other
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Māori responses to COVID-19 are exemplars for crisis health and wellbeing support
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News-19, Māori didn’t just respond, they identified the need for an equity lens to be applied to the wider response by considering the needs of tangata whenua as Te Tiriti o Waitangi partners and building on work already grounded in tikanga Māori and mātauranga Māori, underpinned by established networks
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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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Urupare mōrearea: Crisis responses monitoring report | 2025 downloads
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Resourcepeople live in Aotearoa New Zealand. A blueprint is required to ensure that a nationally cohesive approach to crisis response is developed by June 2027. This should build on what is already working and new initiatives underway in parts of Aotearoa New Zealand that can be scaled up nationwide. In
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Broader focus on wellbeing needed to understand COVID-19 impacts
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Newsthat people had access to during that period of the pandemic, and the stresses that emerged when these were lacking and life was disrupted. The analysis used a natural language processing algorithm to look at how we collectively talked about mental health and wellbeing during this period, and how this
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More deliberate focus needed to ensure all people in Aotearoa experience good wellbeing
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Newsyoung people, veterans, rainbow communities, Māori, Pacific peoples, former refugees and migrants, children in state care, older people, rural communities, disabled people, prisoners, and children experiencing adverse childhood events, looked at felt life is less worthwhile, and reported less
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Strategy to improve mental health outcomes on the way
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Newsstrategy . We will let the Minister know what we hope to see in the new strategy, and provide advice on how we expect to see people with lived experience of mental distress and addiction, the broad mental health workforce, and voices of communities sought out, heard, and represented in the strategy
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Rolling out more options for crisis care
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NewsAllen, the founder of Taranaki Retreat, explains this concept using the language of a “window of opportunity”: seeing crisis as a moment in time where there is an opportunity for tāngata whaiora and their supporters to address what is leading to the distress and to find alternative and sustainable