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Rōpū taki Māori

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The Māori Caucus was disestablished in February 2024. 

The Māori Caucus brings together Māori members from across the Canterbury Clinical Network (CCN) to provide a coordinated focus on equitable health outcomes for Māori in Canterbury.

By strengthening connections and improving the capacity and capability of Māori members who participate on Workstreams and Service Level Alliances, the Māori Caucus supports Workstreams and Service Level Alliances to deliver outcomes that protect and improve Māori health. Key to this is aligning activity with the Māori Health Outcomes Framework.

Equitable health outcomes is a key strategic priority for the Canterbury Clinical Network. Māori are one of the most disadvantaged ethnicities in the New Zealand health system, with real disparities between Māori and non-Māori in relation to health outcomes and life expectancy.

The Māori Caucus strengthens the Canterbury Clinical Network’s capacity for planning improved health services for Māori. As an alliance-wide group, the Māori Caucus compliments existing Canterbury-wide Māori perspective groups such as Te Kāhui o Papaki Kā Tai (TKOP) and the Māori/Pacific Provider Forum.

The Māori Caucus was established in 2013 and comes together for quarterly hui. Its objectives are:

  • Māori on Canterbury Clinical Network Workstreams and Service Level Alliances are informed of activities across the whole of health system, and are able to support each other as and when required.
  • To utilise the collective Māori skillsets, strengthening contributions to Workstreams and Service Level Alliances where requested.
  • To provide a level of consistency in messaging across Workstreams and Service Level Alliances in relation to the Māori Health Outcomes Framework, Health Equity Assessment Tool and Whānau Ora Tool.
  • To reduce the isolation as the sole Māori voice on Workstreams and Service Level Alliances in relation to Māori health.
  • To problem solve issues as they arise.
  • To encourage or implement through Canterbury Clinical Network, that Māori health is ‘everyone’s business’ not just Māori who are participating on the Workstream and Service Level Alliance. It is a responsibility of all Workstream and Service Level Alliance members.
Latest News
14Jun

Official launch of Safe to talk He pai ki te kōrero

14 Jun, 2018 | Return|

New Zealand’s new sexual harm helpline, Safe to talk He pai ki te kōrero is giving people the chance to seek free, anonymous and confidential support from one central place, says Minister for Social Development Carmel Sepuloni.

The Minister officially launched Safe to talk He pai ki te kōrero on Friday 1 June 2018. It provides nationwide 24/7 access to free confidential information and support to people affected by sexual harm in any way.

“Anyone, anywhere who is affected by sexual harm can use Safe to talk He pai ki te kōrero. It’s for survivors, concerned whānau and people who have harmed others or who may be thinking about harming others," Carmel Sepuloni said.

“So far more than 665 people have made contact with the helpline since it went live nationally in April this year.

“We recognise that it can be really hard for people affected by sexual harm to reach out for support. I’d like to emphasise that anyone contacting the helpline can say as little or as much as they like – and they can remain anonymous if they want to.

“Feedback from the first few weeks of national operation shows that the ability to remain anonymous or provide only a first name is helping people to feel comfortable with accessing the service.

“The online chat function is proving a popular communication method, followed by calls, text messaging and then emails.”

Safe to talk He pai ki te kōrero is operated by government-funded social enterprise Homecare Medical and went live nationally on 16 April 2018 after a successful initial test run in Canterbury.

Safe to talk is available 24 hours, seven days a week by:

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Useful resources

Māori Engagement Chart

Māori Engagement Chart for CCN groups.

Māori Health Framework

Canterbury's guide to achieve best health outcomes for whānau Māori.

Māori Health Action Plan

Māori Health Action Plan

Canterbury's Māori Health Action Plan on the District Health Board website.

He Kete Hauora Waitaha

Enabling assessment and planning for improved Māori health outcomes.

Te Whare Tapa Whā

Te Whare Tapa Whā – the four cornerstones of Māori health.

Integrated Planning Guide

A resource for planning healthy, resilient and sustainable communities