Health / August 2022
September 2022 | July 2022-
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Tiaki gives Te Wao Nui two thumbs up!
- Wellington Health Foundation
- We were super excited to welcome our new friend Tiaki to Te Wao Nui today! Tiaki loved being shown around the new hospital, said it’s looking mīharo/magnificent, and gave it a big two thumbs up! Tiaki also loved seeing the new soft toy, colouring book and plasters that have been created by the Foundation and.
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Amazing gift from Foundation donor
- Wellington Health Foundation
- Last week ended on a high note when The Music Warehouse Lower Hutt dropped off our gorgeous new piano.
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Lower Hutt, Lower Hutt City, Wellington, 5010, New Zealand (OpenStreetMap)
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Shirley Barton Trophy and Ballantyne Cup race
- Wellington Scottish Athletics Club
- All you need to know about this year’s race This year marks the centenary of the Ballantyne Cup — one of the club’s oldest trophies. We would have held the centenary last year but, well, COVID. So here we are celebrating 100 (and 1) years instead. The Shirley Barton Trophy (for women) and the Ballantyne […]
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Upper Makaroro
- Wellington Tramping and Mountainneering Club
- Our trip planning got off to a shaky start when James Wratt, the original trip leader, needed to isolate as a Covid close contact. Finding out I would lead an overnight trip for the first time, two days before the trip was due to start, was a bit of a shock. However James had done ... Read more
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NCEA changes due to COVID-19 for 2022
- Wellington High School
- As you may have seen in the news the Minister of Education announced changes to NCEA that recognise the impact of students and teacher absences due to COVID-19 and other winter illnesses have had on teaching, learning and assessment this year. In 2022, students will be entitled to 1 Learning Recognition Credit (LRC) for every […]
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Wellington High School, Taranaki Street, Mount Cook, Wellington, Wellington City, Wellington, 6011, New Zealand (OpenStreetMap)
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Introducing Tiaki
- Wellington Health Foundation
- Nau mai, ki te whānau kaitiaki ō Te Wao Nui.
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Hospi
- Wellington Health Foundation
- Hospi was developed in 2008 by Wellington Hospitals Foundation and quickly became a much-loved member of the Foundation family and a very special part of the Wellington Regional Children’s Hospital team.
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New livery for Foundation cars
- Wellington Health Foundation
- We are incredibly grateful to our Charity Partner Capital City Motors, Wellington region’s leading Ford and Mazda dealers, who have generously sponsored the Wellington Hospital’s Foundation cars for many years.
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Thanks to all our collectors
- Wellington Health Foundation
- Our heartfelt thanks to all the wonderful volunteers who braved Wellington’s wintry weather and kindly turned out to collect for our soggy children’s hospital Street Appeal. If you missed them on Friday please donate HERE. The post Thanks to all our collectors appeared first on Wellington Hospitals Foundation.
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Our new name: Te Whatu Ora – Capital, Coast and Hutt Valley
- Capital & Coast District Health Board
- From 1 July, we have been going by our new name: Te Whatu Ora – Capital, Coast and Hutt Valley.
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Lower Hutt, Wellington, New Zealand (OpenStreetMap)
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Hutt Hospital emergency department experiencing higher patient numbers
- Hutt Valley District Health Board
- The ED at Hutt Hospital is currently experiencing higher volumes of patients and people are asked to please only present if they require urgent or emergency care.
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Our new name: Te Whatu Ora – Capital, Coast and Hutt Valley
- Hutt Valley District Health Board
- From 1 July, we have been going by our new name: Te Whatu Ora – Capital, Coast and Hutt Valley.
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Lower Hutt, Wellington, New Zealand (OpenStreetMap)
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2022 September Concert Change
- Chamber Music Hutt Valley
- Due to the withdrawal of one of its members from public performance during the COVID-19 pandemic, the concert by the Aroha String Quartet scheduled for Tuesday 20th September has been replaced. CMNZ is pleased to present – but note the change of date: New Zealand String QuartetWednesday 28th September – 7.30 pmSt Marks Church, Woburn […]
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“It was the scariest thing I’d ever witnessed”
- Wellington Health Foundation
- Fayth is incredibly grateful for the good care her wee boy Wolfgang received at Wellington Regional Children’s Hospital.
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Please give generously when you see our collectors TODAY!
- Wellington Health Foundation
- Wellington Regional Children’s Hospital Annual Street Appeal is on TODAY! With more than 87,000 child health visits from sick and seriously injured children every year, please give generously when you see our fantastic volunteer collectors or donate HERE. The post Please give generously when you see our collectors TODAY! appeared first on Wellington Hospitals Foundation.
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Making the World by Stella Peg Carruthers
- Urban Dream Brokerage
- <figure class=" sqs-block-image-figure intrinsic " > A Place for Local Making - Xin Cheng & Adam Ben-Dror | Image - Markuza Maric More than only fixing things, the Urban Dream Brokerage facilitated makerspace and online platform ‘A Place for Local Making’ took making to the next level of resourcefulness. Artists Xin Cheng and Adam Ben-Dror (with support from Grace Ryder) recently ran the pop-up focusing on creative remaking in central Wellington. Taking pre-loved materials as the basis for creative exploration, Xin and Adam forged local connections within the fields of waste-minimization. Equally, by hosting convivial events which opened up questions around the right to repair and the role of the designer in contemporary society, they fostered an alternative view towards cultures of making and living together. Through re-visioning the acts of designing, making, using and remaking, it was not only objects being re-created but also notions of community. Informed by Free University principles, resourceful makerspaces such as ‘A Place for Local Making’ meet the issue of waste head on in an egalitarian manner. Applying local practices to address global issues, resourceful makerspaces can be platforms for genuine community connection. This re-making of waste materials within a community context felt particularly pertinent in Wellington – a city recovering from a violent protest, with the cloud of Covid-19 still hanging low. Through coming together to fix and transform broken things and waste materials, people engaged with their material surrounds in new ways. Repair and remaking together can also regenerate community cohesion. <figure class=" sqs-block-image-figure intrinsic " > Creative Mending Circle coordinator & writer - Stella Carruthers | Image - Markuza Maric With a background in community education, textile crafts and a passion for sustainability, I joined ‘A Place for Local Making’ as a co-facilitator for the workshop ‘Creative Mending Circle’ in April. Influenced by strong ecological ideals and my own low-waste lifestyle, I was attracted by the resourceful use of waste applied in a community setting. To fix rather than throw out is a philosophy that serves both people and the planet. It is one I personally adhere to. It is also at the heart of Xin and Adam’s creative practices where they consider conviviality, sustainability, and ways of living in a waste-conscious way. As Adam said, ‘Sometimes it is hard to connect the act of gathering and working with these “waste” materials with global societal changes that have to happen in order for us to come into more harmony with the rest of life. They just seem so small. Xin pointed out to me though that these practices add to the diversity, that the world is a richer place because someone is practicing this kind of thing. It opens possibilities for other ways of living and adds up to something greater than the sum of its parts.’ As artists, Xin and Adam have been growing this idea of opening new possibilities through sharing the process of re-making. <figure class=" sqs-block-image-figure intrinsic " > Creative Mending Circle at A Place For Local Making | Image - Markuza Maric De-stabilising traditional hierarchies through re-making practices can democratise creativity. In the mending workshop I co-facilitated with Xin, we supported everyday people in giving new lives to clothing. Snaps on a shirt were both strengthened and adorned with brightly-coloured stitches. Meanwhile, children’s clothing and hard-wearing socks were patched to extend their useful lives. Taking an egalitarian approach to making, anyone could learn to add to and alter their world through making and remaking. As we face the challenges of the 21st century: the effects of the Anthropocene and the climate crisis, the COVID pandemic, a myriad of issues around waste... What is the role of the artist and the designer today? What kind of creative practices could there be, with locality and community at the centre? Xin and Adam approached their position as artists and designers by taking on a facilitator role. Whether it is running a practical workshop or hosting a reading group, both artists work with materials and ideas. More than ‘Think Globally, Act Locally’ – their approach is about thinking locally as well. <figure class=" sqs-block-image-figure intrinsic " > Frugal Electronics Workshop | Image: Markuza Maric Through amplifying and sharing innovative ways of (re)making at A Place for Local Making, fellow human beings were supported in designing to meet their own needs. This approach is based on Ezio Manzini’s ideas of diffuse design: people revisioning reality in a manner meaningful to their own context. The principles of small, local, open, connected help communities reimagine new ways of providing for their needs and community life. Adam and Xin talk about sharing resourcefulness, re-making and repair as ways of changing the culture of living. By taking the time to fix things at hand, doing so through working with our hands, and learning from each other, we are envisioning the possibilities for a different kind of collective future. In this future, social connections are made through non-hierarchical skill-sharing, across generational and demographic diversity. In the mending workshop I co-hosted, participants ranged from the elderly to early twenties. I enjoyed seeing a middle-aged mother showing a young man how to hem a shirt. Next to them, a younger woman helped thread a needle for an older lady. These exchanges are beautiful examples of people approaching repair as both life-enhancing and pleasurable. More powerfully, they are also moments where everyday people practice new (and ancient) skills for an uncertain future. Local skills and resources are utilised in the broadest sense, both in accessibility and value. <figure class=" sqs-block-image-figure intrinsic " > Frugal Electronics Workshop - Curator Grace Ryder & Artist Adam Ben-Dror | Image Markuza Maric Value and the associated idea of abundance are central to the discussions of making and social innovation at ‘A Place for Local Making’. Cherishing small acts of making, re-making and caring can reshape our mental models which give rise to values in life. ‘Time’s gone by so quickly!’ I overheard one participant say. ‘This mending thing, it’s slow… but it’s fun!’ Here, time became valued once again–not only for the results of the work done, but also for the creative enjoyment and the human connections which grew from time spent together. As a creative adventure, mending and (re)making is as much about the process as the end result. In their time at ‘A Place for Local Making’, Xin and Adam facilitated process-based creativity. They asked questions around waste and wants, value and needs, and they did so through reaching out rather than drawing in. Instead of making artworks to display on a wall, they supported community creativity through researching local waste streams and stories of remaking, gathering reclaimed materials for communal use and facilitating public events. Through the workshops and numerous examples of local (re)making documented on the online platform, we can see that with the toolkit of resourceful making and thinking, we can reconsider how we relate with our material surroundings. A product or object may be repaired to fulfil its original designed purpose, or adapted to new, future lives. To consider what happens to an object when it eventually leaves a person’s hands gives new meaning to the word resourcefulness. Here, as we learned at ‘A Place for Local Making,’ it can be fruitful to think of materiality in terms of what a thing is made of, how it is made and remade, who is doing the caring and remaking, as well as what it could become within a constantly changing, living world. <figure class=" sqs-block-image-figure intrinsic " > Contributors links Writer - Stella Carruthers Project - A Place For Local Making Artists - Xin Cheng + Adam Ben-Dror Photographer - Markuza Maric
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Wellington Regional Children’s Hospital Street Appeal coming soon!
- Wellington Health Foundation
- After two long years we are finally back on the streets again!! With more than 87,000 child health visits from sick and seriously injured children every year, please look out for our collectors next Friday 19th August or donate today. The post Wellington Regional Children’s Hospital Street Appeal coming soon! appeared first on Wellington Hospitals Foundation.
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Support for Mental Health
- Wellington Health Foundation
- The new Mark Dunajtschik Mental Health Centre, to be built on the Hutt Hospital campus is another reflection of Mark Dunajtschik’s amazing generosity and desire to create better health services for the people of Te Whanganui-a-Tara.
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Cancelled culture comes back: the Edinburgh Festival turns 75
- Victoria University of Wellington
- International festival is alive and well after two years of pandemic disruption, writes Sarah Thomasson.
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Eye Clinic gets much needed facelift
- Wellington Health Foundation
- Patients, staff and visitors to Wellington Hospital’s Eye Clinic will no longer be surrounded by bare walls.
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Hutt City Rotary raffle winners announced
- Wellington Health Foundation
- Earlier in the year our friends at Hutt City Rotary raffled off a new 2022 Kia Picanto car, amongst other prizes to raise funds for the two whānau spaces in the new children’s hospital.
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