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Child and Youth Health Toolkit
Ensuring access to appropriate child health care services including well child and family health care, and immunisation

Date of publication: November 2004


Executive summary

Healthy children grow into healthy adults. Good child health is important, therefore, both in its own right and as a contribution to adult health. The effects of poor health in childhood can last a lifetime and explain many of our adult health inequalities. This in turn affects the health of the next generation.

Children are dependent on their family or caregiver for access to services. While differences in health status are the result of a complex interplay of societal, family and service factors, they are largely the result of differences in material resources such as parental income, parental education, parental employment and housing. Differences in access to health care services and in the quality and level of care provided also have a considerable impact on health outcomes.

The vision of the Child Health Strategy is ‘Our children/tamariki: seen, heard, and getting what they need’. This means children need to be loved and nurtured in families that are safe and free from violence, and parents need to be able to access support from their wider whänau and community. Community-based health services can make a real difference to the health of children by ensuring that they:
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Good health for all children and a reduction in inequalities among those with poor health status require an analysis of health needs, good advice on how to overcome actual barriers to services, and co-ordinated and systematic effort from the health and other sectors. Achieving this means understanding the following key concepts.

Achieving the actions outlined in these key concepts requires the following infrastructural supports:
While each DHB will have its own arrangements and processes, general mechanisms are needed to ensure:
The vision, future directions and population approach of the Primary Health Care Strategy, implemented through PHOs is the main way to see improved access to services for children and young people.
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Publication availability

The toolkit is only available on this website in Word & PDF

Child and Youth Health Toolkit (Word, 861 KB)

Child and Youth Health Toolkit (PDF, 957 KB)

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Publishing information

Date of publication: November 2004

ISBN 0-478-25763-5 (Internet)

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