Published on 21 Aug 2025

Mapping the mental health monitoring landscape to drive systems improvement: Stocktake of mental health and addiction monitoring data

Dr Brendan Stevenson Quantitative Analytics Lead Contact me
Jason Carpenter Director Business Development (NZ) Contact me

The Mental Health and Wellbeing Commission needed a clear picture of all routine data collection across New Zealand's mental health and addictions sector. They faced a significant challenge - identifying not just obvious monitoring activities but also hidden ones spread across dozens of agencies. This visibility was essential for making informed strategic decisions about system improvements. Allen + Clarke delivered a comprehensive data map within just two months and with a limited budget.

Our systematic methodology delivered comprehensive sector coverage despite tight timeframes and budget constraints. Regular client engagement ensured alignment and allowed real-time refinement throughout the project. 

 

The resulting landscape map empowered the Commission to make informed strategic decisions for New Zealand's mental health system improvements.

Finding hidden data in a complex system

The Mental Health and Wellbeing Commission needed to map all mental health and addiction monitoring activities across New Zealand, but faced several critical challenges such as scattered information sources, hidden data collectors and unclear reporting relationships. 

Data collection activities were spread across dozens of agencies with no central directory or coordination point. Without a system-wide view, multiple agencies likely gathered similar data, creating inefficiencies and inconsistencies. While major systems like Ministry of Health PRIMHD were well-known, many smaller organisations were quietly collecting valuable mental health data with little visibility. The connections between data collection activities were often undocumented, making it difficult to understand how information flowed through the system. 

As a relatively new organisation, the Commission lacked institutional knowledge about these complex monitoring networks. They needed a comprehensive map of who collected what data, how that information was used and where critical gaps existed – all within a two-month timeframe and a limited budget.

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Systematic discovery in three phases

Throughout the project, we held regular liaison meetings and sense-making sessions with the Commission. This ensured alignment with their needs and allowed us to refine findings in real time. 

Our project was structured into three phases:

 

 


  • Detailed planning – we established clear parameters and communication channels through inception meetings and project management.

  • Systematic data collection – we conducted web-based searched followed by direct telephone calls to key agencies to confirm findings and identify gaps.

  • Comprehensive mapping – we collated all findings into a detailed landscape map with built-in feedback loops for validation.

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Unprecedented visibility across the sector

We developed a centralised landscape map that clearly showed who collects mental health and addiction data, what specific information they monitor, when and why this monitoring occurs and how the collected data gets used in practice. 

The landscape map provided the Commission with three key benefits:

 


  • Strategic foundation - for the first time, the Commission gained full visibility of all monitoring activities across the entire sector by the contracted deadline. 

  • Clear gap identification - the map highlighted exactly where monitoring was missing, allowing the Commission to focus their advocacy efforts. 

  • Platform for system enhancement - the comprehensive landscape established a solid foundation for future strategic work and directly supported the Commission's mandate to improve mental health outcomes for all New Zealanders. 

 Interconnected coloured pathways forming abstract network diagram
 Interconnected coloured pathways forming abstract network diagram