Safe Sleep Day Digital Tile 9Fabrics that breathe help keep |
Safe Sleep Day Digital Tile 4Lay pēpi on their back - allow |
Safe Sleep Day Digital Tile 2Lay pepi on their back - allow the back of pēpi to be embraced by Papatūānuku. |
Safe Sleep Day Digital Tile 1Ko Rangainui ki runga, |
Safe Sleep Day - ScreensaverSafe Sleep Day - Screensaver |
Safe Sleep Day - ScreensaverSafe Sleep Day - Screensaver |
Wahakura Quality Assurance ChecklistThis resource offers weavers and those receiving wahakura a guide to the quality expected of a wahakura. |
Caring for Papatūānuku through the recycling of plastic baby bedsThis resource provides practical guidance on recycling and reusing plastic baby beds in a way that cares for Papatūānuku. It has been developed by Hāpai te Hauora as part of a national, integrated approach to SUDI prevention in Aotearoa and extends on current approaches to caring for Papatūānuku already adopted by some providers. |
‘Safe Sleep For PEPE’ MagnetThe ‘Safe Sleep For PEPE’ magnets will need to be ordered through Magnets New Zealand LTD. Magnet specifications, costs per unit and supplier contact details are listed in the attached PDF. |
Illustration - 7Download contains Black & White transparent versions of the illustration. (PNG) |
Illustration - 6Download contains Black & White transparent versions of the illustration. (PNG) |
Illustration - 5Download contains Black & White transparent versions of the illustration. (PNG) |
Illustration - 4Download contains Black & White transparent versions of the illustration. (PNG) |
Illustration - 3Download contains Black & White transparent versions of the illustration. (PNG) |
Illustration - 2Download contains Black & White transparent versions of the illustration. (PNG) |
Illustration - 1Download contains Black & White transparent versions of the illustration. (PNG) |
Tatou te faatinoina le tautala atu i upu o le ola - 2Tatou te faatinoina le tautala atu i upu o le ola - Samoa |
Tatou te faatinoina le tautala atu i upu o le olaTatou te faatinoina le tautala atu i upu o le ola - Samoa |
It takes a village to raise a child - Poster (JPG)It takes a village to raise a child - Poster (JPG) |
It takes a village to raise a child - Social tile (JPG)It takes a village to raise a child - Social tile (JPG) |
It takes a village to raise a child - Social tile (JPG)It takes a village to raise a child - Social tile (JPG) |
It takes a village to raise a child - Poster (PDF)It takes a village to raise a child - Poster (PDF) |
My Baby Village PosterSpeaking words of life is what we do. |
Managing your milk production after your baby has died suddenlyManaging lactation after losing a baby to SUDI (sudden unexpected death of an infant) can be an extra challenge at a time that is already incredibly difficult. |
Whetūrangitia - Information for family and whānau experiencing the death of a baby or child.The website provides an electronic resource that explains the PM and coronial process, legal information and financial /entitlement information, memory making, burial and cremation, travel and transport and valuable bereavement support resources. |
Wai ū - Ko te whenua te wai ū mō te tangataThis image was created, in collaboration with Women’s Health Action (WHA), to support and showcase the value and importance of Papatūānuku in relation to whānau well-being. Within Māori oral traditions, it is Papatūānuku who inherently nurtures and nourishes the health of whānau in the same way that breast milk and rongoā like wahakura sustains whānau and mokopuna ora. |
Wai ū - Hokia ki tō ūkaipōThis key health message centralises the importance of returning to one’s place of sustenance and nourishment. In context of this image, ūkaipō refers to the mother’s breastmilk. This image was created, in collaboration with Women’s Health Action (WHA), to support and showcase the value and importance of breastfeeding, as illustrated orally in Māori history and society. |
Auahi kore - Smokefree posterThis key health message centralises the importance of te whare tangata (the house of humanity). It stresses that the first home and land of a child is within the womb and land of their mother. Put simply, the message emphasises that from the inception of pregnancy and throughout the lifespan one should strive to be smokefree. |