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About the framework
The Ministry of Health’s Te Tiriti o Waitangi framework is an expression of the Crown’s Te Tiriti obligations in the context of the health and disability system.
As a department of the public service, the Ministry of Health – Manatū Hauora has a responsibility to contribute to the Crown meeting its obligations under Te Tiriti o Waitangi. This statement confirms our commitment and provides high-level direction for how we will go about delivering on it.
Meeting our obligations under Te Tiriti is necessary if we are to realise the overall aims of He Korowai Oranga: Māori Health Strategy and achieve outcomes for the health and disability system as a whole.
This includes a desire to see all New Zealanders living longer, healthier and more independent lives. Te Tiriti obligations underpin Whakamaua: Māori Health Action Plan 2020–2025.
He Korowai Oranga: Māori Health Strategy (guide)
Whakamaua: Māori Health Action Plan 2020–2025
Our expression of Te Tiriti
The text of Te Tiriti, including the preamble and the 3 articles, along with the Ritenga Māori declaration, are the enduring foundation of our approach.
Based on these foundations, we will strive to achieve the following 4 goals, each expressed in terms of mana.
Mana whakahaere
Effective and appropriate stewardship or kaitiakitanga over the health and disability system. This goes beyond the management of assets or resources.
Mana motuhake
Enabling the right for Māori to be Māori (Māori self-determination), to exercise their authority over their lives, and to live on Māori terms and according to Māori philosophies, values and practices, including tikanga Māori (Māori philosophy and customary practices).
Mana tangata
Achieving equity in health and disability outcomes for Māori across the life course and contributing to Māori wellness.
Mana Māori
Enabling ritenga Māori (Māori customary rituals) which are framed by te ao Māori (the Māori world), enacted through tikanga Māori and encapsulated within mātauranga Māori (Māori knowledge).
Te Tiriti principles for the health system
The principles of Te Tiriti o Waitangi, as articulated by the courts and the Waitangi Tribunal, provide the framework for how we will meet our obligations under Te Tiriti in our day-to-day work.
The Hauora report (Waitangi Tribunal 2019) recommends the following principles for the primary health-care system. These principles are applicable to the wider health and disability system.
Tino rangatiratanga
The guarantee of tino rangatiratanga, which provides for Māori self-determination and mana motuhake in the design, delivery, and monitoring of health and disability services.
Equity
The principle of equity, which requires the Crown to commit to achieving equitable health outcomes for Māori.
Active protection
The principle of active protection, which requires the Crown to act, to the fullest extent practicable, to achieve equitable health outcomes for Māori. This includes ensuring that it, its agents, and its Treaty partner are well informed on the extent, and nature, of both Māori health outcomes and efforts to achieve Māori health equity.
Options
The principle of options, which requires the Crown to provide for and properly resource kaupapa Māori health and disability services. Furthermore, the Crown is obliged to ensure that all health and disability services are provided in a culturally appropriate way that recognises and supports the expression of hauora Māori models of care.
Partnership
The principle of partnership, which requires the Crown and Māori to work in partnership in the governance, design, delivery, and monitoring of health and disability services. Māori must be co-designers, with the Crown, of the primary health system for Māori.