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NZMedicineOverlooked from the right5 days ago

Quarter of young people report high levels of psychological distress - report

A report by the Mental Health and Wellbeing Commission indicates that nearly a quarter of young people in New Zealand reported high levels of psychological distress in the month before the survey. The report highlights a decrease in access to specialist mental health services, along with high rates of declined referrals. It notes significant unmet needs among Māori populations, with no substantial increase in funding for related services. Data shows that 14% of people aged 15 and older experienced 'high' or 'very high' psychological distress in the four weeks prior to the survey, doubling the

Hine Moeke-Murray says services have been jumping through hoops to meet the political outcomes of the government of the day.

Māori, Pacific people and young people are not being prioritised when it comes to accessing mental health support, a new report has found, despite evidence clearly demonstrating these groups need a higher level of support.

The Mental Health and Wellbeing Commission has reported that fewer people are able to access kaupapa Māori primary mental health services, and that funding for these services has not kept pace with other mental health investment.

Only 29 percent of Māori who access specialist service use kaupapa Māori services, and young people are increasingly being declined for specialist help after being referred.

The report notes the age-standardised rate of suicide deaths is highest among Māori men aged 25 to 44 years, Maori and Pasifika being more likely to be kept in solitary confinement, and young people increasingly being placed in adult in-patient services, that are potentially unsafe.

Carole Koha has worked in Mental Health and Addictions for the past 35 years. She is currently the chief executive of Te Waka Whaiora, a kaupapa Maori mental health and addictions support service based in Porirua.

"We talk about choice, you talk about who access's what services, Māori don't have a choice. When you come against 20 non-Māori organisations and maybe one Māori organisation within a community they will definitely referred to the non-Māori organisation, because either A) there's no trust or B) we're not funded to deliver clinical services," she said.

There were a whole range of reasons Māori continued to go to non-Māori services and she said it was not that Māori services were not in a position to deliver, they just did not have the funds.

"So by the time they do access services they're in a crisis, but there aren't enough services to meet that particular crisis so the burden becomes a whānau burden, and sometimes within all cultures - not just Māori - whānau are actually the reason why our tangata are where they are."

Hine Moeke-Murray is chief executive of Te Kupenga Net Trust, based in Gisborne, a kaupapa Maori organisation providing peer support and advocacy in mental health and addictions.

She said a huge part of the issue was that many Māori did not meet the criteria for intervention.

"It's no longer intervention, it's no longer prevention we are doing critical response to our whānau because they couldn't get through the doors in the first place."

Without stable funding and strong relationships with clinical services it's very difficult to achieve better outcomes for whānau Māori, she said.

"When we talk about intervention our whānau can come to a community organisation absolutely, if they need further clinical intervention because they may need some specialist care and they don't meet the criteria of that service where to from there? Where to from there? They get bounced back into the community and when something goes wrong it's the community organisation that's blamed."

Services were jumping through hoops to meet the political outcomes the government of the day required, which created huge pressures on services as well, she said.

"If there's no services out there that can meet the needs of our babies, all of our people, then how do we change the system because it is system driven."

Koha said there were pockets of funding going out to Māori services, but not enough to make positive long-term outcomes.

The system was still not meeting the needs of rangatahi, she said.

"We have a rangatahi portion within our contract but we don't have a clinical [portion], so what I've had to do is employ clinicians out of some of our little bit of surplus that we have. We're not contracted to do it but we need to do it because I'm finding that that's a gap."

Minister acknowledges inequitable mental health outcomes

In a statement to RNZ, Minister for Mental Health Matt Doocey acknowledged Māori had inequitable mental health outcomes, particularly in suicide rates.

"That is why when I launched the Suicide Prevention Action Plan, this had multiple specific actions that were for Māori, to acknowledge those inequities.

"I am committed to working with community groups and Health NZ to ensure we are improving outcomes for all New Zealanders, including Māori. That is where the mental health and addiction targets come in. I have been very clear that we are not just celebrating when we reach the targets at a national level. What is most important is getting into the data and ensuring that all groups are reaching the targets. This includes Māori. If there's a region and group not meeting the target, I expect additional focus to be put into that area."

"We have invested additional funding, whether it be through the Innovation Fund or the Suicide Prevention Action Plan, for Māori, and I committed to continuing to work with our community organisations to get more funding out the doo…

Read the full article at RNZ (Radio New Zealand)
Source document: Mental Health and Wellbeing Commission Report

3 reports

RNZ (Radio New Zealand)State / PublicLeft5 days ago
Māori, Pacific people and youth not prioritised in mental health support

A report by the Mental Health and Wellbeing Commission highlights that Māori, Pacific people, and young people are not being adequately prioritized in mental health support in New Zealand. The report indicates that fewer Māori are accessing kaupapa Māori primary mental health services, and funding for these services has not matched other mental health investments. It also points out disparities such as higher suicide rates among Māori men aged 25–44, increased use of solitary confinement for Māori and Pacific individuals, and young people being placed in adult inpatient services.

Bias read (Left): The article presents findings from a commission report highlighting systemic inequities in mental health care for marginalized groups—specifically Māori, Pacific peoples, and youth. The framing emphasizes underrepresentation, lack of culturally appropriate services, and disproportionate negative Out

Official sources cited

The SpinoffIndependentLeft6 days ago
Our mental health services are improving – unless you’re young, Māori, Pasifika or disabled

A report by Te Hiringa Mahara – Mental Health and Wellbeing Commission indicates some improvements in New Zealand's mental health system, including better access to primary and community services and reduced workforce vacancies. However, these gains have not been evenly distributed, with disparities noted among Māori, Pasifika communities, young people, and those with disabilities. Specialist mental health services remain below pre-pandemic levels, and young people without access to dedicated youth facilities are often placed in adult wards.

Bias read (Left): The article highlights systemic inequities in mental health service access for marginalized groups such as Māori, Pasifika, young people, and disabled individuals. It emphasizes the lack of progress for these groups despite general improvements, which frames the issue as a matter of social justice.

Official sources cited

  • government Te Hiringa Mahara – Mental Health and Wellbeing Commission Report
  • government RNZ Interview with Karen Orsborn
RNZ (Radio New Zealand)State / PublicCenter6 days ago
Quarter of young people report high levels of psychological distress - report

A report by the Mental Health and Wellbeing Commission indicates that nearly a quarter of young people in New Zealand reported high levels of psychological distress in the month before the survey. The report highlights a decrease in access to specialist mental health services, along with high rates of declined referrals. It notes significant unmet needs among Māori populations, with no substantial increase in funding for related services. Data shows that 14% of people aged 15 and older experienced 'high' or 'very high' psychological distress in the four weeks prior to the survey, doubling the

Bias read (Center): The article presents statistical findings from an official source (Mental Health and Wellbeing Commission) without overtly biased language or selective emphasis. It reports on mental health trends across various demographic groups without taking a clear stance or favoring any particular perspective.

Official sources cited

  • government Mental Health and Wellbeing Commission Report

Go to the primary sources (4)

The official sources this coverage is built on. Read them directly to bypass framing.

  • governmentMental Health and Wellbeing Commission Report
  • governmentTe Hiringa Mahara – Mental Health and Wellbeing Commission Report
  • governmentRNZ Interview with Karen Orsborn
  • governmentMental Health and Wellbeing Commission Report