Need help evaluating websites?
Search engines like Google can be a great way of quickly finding lots of information relevant to your study. However, you have to be careful which websites you use. Use this CRAAP test guide to help you evaluate websites you find.
Documents, reports and helpful online resources
This review explores Māori (Indigenous people) specific cultural approaches to assist trauma informed care relevant to: • service delivery; • workforce responsiveness; and • aspects that will help facilitate implementation.
This document outlines way to support people with trauma within a te ao Māori framework, including Te Whare Tapa Whā.
This PDF documents a pilot programme for support workers using ADOM (Alcohol and Drug Outcome Measure) with people transitioning from residential treatment into the community.
This report presents the experiences of Māori care and support workers working in residential aged care, home and community support, disability support and mental health and addiction.
This document is a practice guide for mental health and addiction services and is infused with practices and values from Te Ao Māori.
This document examines family and sexual violence within a Te Ao Māori context, exploring historical trauma and acknowledging mātauranga Māori.
The resources on this website provide a framework that describes the values, attitudes, knowledge and skills required for working effectively with people and whānau experiencing mental health and addiction needs.
Real Skills Plus is a competency framework designed to help you identify your strengths and further develop your knowledge and skills as a practitioner working with infants, children, and young people and their whānau.
This fact sheet includes facts and figures, outlines the challenges, charts indicators of progress and shares commitments made by Member States to tackle the issue of mental health.
Incident report writing
This webpage gives concise tips on how to write an effective report in a health setting and gives examples of what not to do as well as what to do.
Practice writing a report using a given scenario and an incident form.
This document, while not created for an Aotearoa setting, gives very clear indication of the type of incident that needs to be reported on. It lists scenarios that don't require a report, and those that do.