Youth19.ac.nz
Access to Health Services: A Youth19 report
Web[email protected]. Approved by The University of Auckland Human Participants Ethics Committee , application #022244. “In Youth19, most students (78%) reported that they had accessed at least one health care service in the previous year. Accessing health care was more common among students from wealthier schools and …
Actived: 1 days ago
URL: https://www.youth19.ac.nz/publications/access-to-health-services-report
Talavou o le Moana: The Health and Wellbeing of Pacific …
WebTalavou o le Moana summarises key findings for Pacific secondary school students in the areas of ethnic and gender identity; family and faith; socioeconomic environments and housing; education; friends and community connections; physical, mental and sexual health; substance use; and healthcare access.
Fact Sheets and Briefs
WebThis factsheet presents Rainbow-specific findings about alcohol use among secondary school students based on Youth 2000 survey data. It includes trends, data on self-reported experiences of alcohol harm, and risk and protective factors associated with high-risk drinking among Rainbow young people.
The Projects — Youth19
WebThe Youth19 Rangatahi Smart Survey: Building on Youth2000. The Adolescent Health Research Group (AHRG) carried out Youth2000 surveys in 2001, 2007 and 2012 with a total of over 27,000 young people from New Zealand high schools, kura kaupapa Māori, alternative education and teen parent units. Youth19 builds on this work, retaining core …
Publications — Youth19
WebTalavou o le Moana summarises key findings for Pacific secondary school students in the areas of ethnic and gender identity; family and faith; socioeconomic environments and housing; education; friends and community connections; physical, mental and sexual health; substance use; and healthcare access.
Rangatahi Māori — Youth19
WebThis page shares Maori-specific findings from the Harnessing the Spark of Life Study and Māori-specific results from the Youth19 Rangatahi Smart Survey.. Harnessing the Spark of Life: Maximising whānau contributors to rangatahi wellbeing. HRC project Investigators: Terryann Clark, Jade Le Grice, Shiloh Groot, Matt Shepherd and Sonia Lewycka.
Webinars — Youth19
WebWatch the launch of Talavou o le Moana: The Health and Wellbeing of Pacific secondary school students in Aotearoa New Zealand. This webinar explores findings from the Youth19 survey for Pacific secondary school students in the areas of ethnic and gender identity; family and faith; socioeconomic environments and housing; education; friends …
Introduction and Methods: A Youth19 report
[email protected]. Approved by The University of Auckland Human Participants Ethics Committee , application #022244. “Youth19 builds on the work of the Adolescent Health Research Group (AHRG) and co-ordinates closely with the group. The AHRG was established in 1997 to gather up-to-date, representative, trustworthy data to …
Understanding and addressing alcohol harm among rangatahi Māori
WebThis factsheet presents Māori-specific findings about alcohol use among secondary school students based on Youth 2000 survey data. It includes trends, data on self-reported experiences of alcohol harm, and risk and protective factors associated with high-risk drinking among Māori. It was developed i
Our Collaborators — Youth19
WebBA, MA, DPH, PHD University of Otago. Jude is a research fellow in the Department of Public Health, University of Otago, Wellington. She is a member of the Adolescent Health Research Group, the ASPIRE2025 (tobacco control) research group, and Otago’s Health Promotion and Policy Research Unit (HePPRU), and is a long-term active member of the …
Same- and multiple-sex attracted students: A Youth19 Brief
[email protected]. Approved by The University of Auckland Human Participants Ethics Committee , application #022244. This brief presents key Youth19 findings for same- and multiple-sex attracted high school students.
Measuring whanaungatanga and identity for well-being in …
WebThere have been many attempts at measuring Māori identity and cultural engagement, yet there have been no scales created to specifically explore whanaungatanga. Whanaungatanga can be operationalised as active participation in and a sense of belonging to social groups and collective, reciprocal cari
Previous Projects — Youth19
WebThe Youth2000 survey series asks large, representative samples of secondary school students from New Zealand a wide range of questions. These include questions about ethnicity and culture, physical health, food and activities, substance use, sexual health, injuries and violence, home and family health, school achievement and participation, …
Reports — Publications — Youth19
WebTalavou o le Moana summarises key findings for Pacific secondary school students in the areas of ethnic and gender identity; family and faith; socioeconomic environments and housing; education; friends and community connections; physical, mental and sexual health; substance use; and healthcare access.
East Asian, South Asian, Chinese and Indian Students in Aotearoa: …
Web“The beautiful thing about the growing number of young New Zealanders who name Asia as a place of origin is that they simply cannot be contained within the boxes that New Zealand often assigns to them – and their many special strengths, challenges, and experiences are mapped out in these pages.”Anya Satyanand, CEO Leadership New …
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