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Displaying 21 - 30 results of 79 for "why+i+am+feelign+bloated"
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Focus on youth wellbeing more urgent than ever
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Survey (HES), the Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA), and Ministry of Education administrative data (MoE) using datasets from 2018 & 2024. Average youth mental wellbeing scores dropped between 2018 and 2021, continuing a longer-term decline, and in 2022/23, one in five 15 to
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Rolling out more options for crisis care
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community, by the community to meet their needs. There are some key characteristics that are shared among the services as discussed in the insights paper. A key theme is the holistic nature of the services, which was highlighted as of critical importance by both staff and tāngata whaiora. Jamie
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Mental health and addiction service monitoring
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addiction services monitoring report. This report specifically focuses on access to services and options available. It monitors publicly funded mental health and addiction services and emergency responses over the five years from July 2018 to June 2023. A wide amount of data and information (qualitative
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Infographic - assessment of youth and rangatahi wellbeing and access to services
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Most young people reported good mental wellbeing and rated their family wellbeing highly in the four months preceding the COVID-19 Delta variant outbreak in August 2021 (however, mental wellbeing among young people may have dropped later in 2021). (1) Four out of five young people felt it was easy
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Welcome to new Commission Board member from Chair Hayden Wano
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life, and his lived experience will be an enormous asset to the Board. I would also like to congratulate Board member Kevin Hague on his appointment as Deputy Chair and Alexander El Amanni for his reappointment to the Board, both for three-year terms. Read more about the Commission's Board members .
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Leadership as a mental wellbeing system enabler report downloads
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the leadership enabler of Kia Manawanui: First, we consider what progress is being made on the commitment to uphold Te Tiriti o Waitangi, and support equity of mental wellbeing outcomes for Māori. Second, we assess progress on the commitment to amplifying the voices and leadership of Māori, people
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Advancing lived experience mental health and wellbeing
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a te ao Māori perspective and from a shared perspective. Our other key framework, He Ara Āwhina , enables us to monitor the mental health and addiction system, and is written from the perspective of tāngata whaiora and whānau - amplifying the most important voices. The feedback that we heard from
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2024 mental health and addiction services monitoring – update webinar
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; We hosted a webinar to walk people through key findings from this report alongside the data behind these findings. We also shared the changes we want to see happen. The report shows that service access has increased in some parts of the system but decreased in others. The new Access
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Technical Advisory Network
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Fox (he / him) Nick Garrett (he / him) Te Kani Kingi (he / him) Amanda Luckman (she / her) Leilani Maraku (she / her) Hope McCrohon (she / her) Marcelus Paki (she / her) Ross Phillips (he / him) Sheridan Pooley (she / her) Dr Lynne Russell (ia / she / her) Dr Jordan Waiti (PhD) (he / him) Richard Woodcock (he / him) Craig Wright (he / him) Margaret Aimer Frank Bristol Jason Haitana Lee Trezise Denise Kingi Ulu'ave
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Lived experiences of CCTOs report
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This report looks at compulsory community treatment orders (CCTOs) made under section 29 of the Mental Health Act 1992. The focus is on amplifying voices of tāngata whaiora, whānau, and family. We heard that the clinical review and the court hearing processes involved in CCTOs can silence or