Displaying 661 - 670 of 1056 results
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Te Mauri The Life Force I Rangatahi suicide report I Te pūrongo mō te mate whakamomori o te rangatahi
This report asks why rangatahi, compared with non-Māori young people, have higher rates of death by suicide and what Aotearoa New Zealand is doing, and what else we could do, to prevent rangatahi from taking their lives by suicide.
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Improving health outcomes: Pacific consumer group’s talanoa on Bula Sautu
This document is a thematic analysis of feedback on the Health Quality & Safety Commission’s report, Bula Sautu – A window on quality 2021: Pacific health in the year of COVID-19.
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Patient story: Matthew Gunter
Matthew was 16 years old when he developed appendicitis. His mum, Heather, took him to the local emergency department and he had surgery that night to remove his appendix.
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Second annual report of the Maternal Morbidity Working Group
This is the MMWG’s second annual report. It outlines the work of the MMWG and provides an update on what we have achieved this year and an overview of next steps.
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Vicki Culling discusses the Perinatal and Maternal Mortality Review Committee
Vicki Culling from the Perinatal and Maternal Mortality Review Committee (PMMRC) discusses the loss of her first baby from a still birth, and her involvement as a consumer representative on the PMMRC.
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Peripheral intravenous catheter infographics
Downloadable A3 and A4 versions of the peripheral intravenous catheter (PIVC) infographics.
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Measures Library
Health sectors rely on data to improve quality. Our Measures Library provides technical documents and summaries, management and case documents, plus links to other resources like the Atlas of Healthcare Variation.
- Links to consumer engagement centres
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Health literacy
Health literacy is the foundation for consumer and whānau engagement. Health literacy is being able to obtain, understand and use basic health information to navigate health services and make appropriate health decisions.
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Alwena & Jim's story: Improving communication around cancer diagnosis
Alwena was diagnosed with stage 4 peritoneal cancer. In this video, her husband Jim (a health care professional) shares the story of Alwena's diagnosis and their whānau's experience within the health system.