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Displaying 11 - 20 results of 65 for "la mesada 14 está vigente"
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Te Huringa: Mental Health and Addiction Service Monitoring Reports 2022
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Reo summary 2022 pdf, 147 KB Download Te Huringa: Change and Transformation English summary 2022 pdf, 169 KB Download Braille - Summary of Te Huringa: Change and Transformation brf, 5 KB Download Audio - Summary of Te Huringa: Change and Transformation mp3, 2.4 MB Download Large Print Summary of Te Huringa: Change and Transformation docx, 43 KB Download
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Relationships and engagements
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relationships internally and externally with Māori. To achieve this, our engagement approaches will reflect the organisational establishment and growth, along with emerging relationships with iwi ahi kā. We will then extend from there to recognise other Māori system and service leadership forums
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The Initial Commission reporting
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, 6.9 MB Download Easy Read - Summary of Mā Te Rongo Ake pdf, 2.6 MB Download Audio - Mā Te Rongo Ake / Through Listening and Hearing mp3, 2.1 MB Download Large Print - summary of Mā Te Rongo Ake docx, 81 KB Download Large Print - summary of Mā Te Rongo Ake pdf, 138 KB Download Pūrongo Tōmua / Interim
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Rural communities respond well to pandemic, despite challenges
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of rural communities in Aotearoa New Zealand . Around 16% of the population live in rural areas, and around 35% in total live outside of large urban areas - these figures are higher for Māori. The COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted and exacerbated pre-existing challenges and has had large impacts on
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Bigger role for mental health and addiction peer support workforce called for
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part of the frontline workforce, but they have a wider role too. Alongside other lived experience roles, they can help transform the landscape of mental health and addiction services,” Ms Orsborn said. “There is huge potential for further development of the Māori peer workforce to
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Time called on compulsory community mental health treatment
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law is re-written we expect it to be in line with Te Tiriti o Waitangi, human rights and best practice so people are supported to make decisions about their treatment. Because the new law won’t come into force for several years, we need changes to cultural and other practices to be made now,” Mr Wano said. Read the report
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Mental Health and Wellbeing Commission welcomes Budget 2022 investment in specialist mental health and addiction services
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We commend the Government’s Budget 2022 investment in specialist mental health and addiction, particularly the investment in community-based crisis services, specialist child and adolescent mental health and addiction services, and Kaupapa Māori services. "We see this latest announcement as a
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Lived experience
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important in all of our work. The Mental Health and Wellbeing Commission Act that established Te Hiringa Mahara requires our Board to include people with personal experience of mental distress and addiction at the governance level. See our Lived experience position statement Find more information on
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Top priorities for New Zealand's first Minister for Mental Health
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. Building on the voices of thousands of people who contributed to the landmark Mental Health and Addictions Inquiry, and people we’ve heard from since being established in early 2021, these are our priorities for the new minister: provide more mental health services specifically designed
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Māori responses to COVID-19 are exemplars for crisis health and wellbeing support
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-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