Northland Crisis Support

Northland Crisis Support
Gentle content warning: This page includes crisis, distress, and emergency support information. If you or someone else is in immediate danger, call 111 now or go to the nearest emergency department. :contentReference[oaicite:0]{index=0}

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Immediate help in Northland

If someone may harm themselves or someone else, call 111, go to the nearest emergency department, or contact the local crisis mental health team. :contentReference[oaicite:1]{index=1}

111 Emergency services if someone is in immediate danger.
1737 Free call or text support anytime from a trained counsellor.
0800 223 371 Northland after-hours urgent mental health support. :contentReference[oaicite:2]{index=2}

Northland crisis support

Northland crisis support is provided through Te Tai Tokerau Mental Health & Addictions services, including the Community Assessment & Treatment Team (CATT), which provides 24/7 urgent mental health response, assessment, and short-term support across Northland. :contentReference[oaicite:3]{index=3}

Key local contacts:
Whangārei CATT: 0800 959 606
After hours / weekends: 0800 223 371
Whangārei weekday triage: (09) 430 4101 ext 3537 :contentReference[oaicite:4]{index=4}

Find local support by area

Northland can stay as one regional page for now, with local towns and communities grouped here so people can find a starting point without too many separate pages too early.

Whangārei

For Whangārei city and surrounding communities.

  • Emergency: 111
  • Whangārei CATT: 0800 959 606
  • Weekday triage: (09) 430 4101 ext 3537

Kaipara / Dargaville

For Dargaville and wider Kaipara communities.

  • Emergency: 111
  • Kaipara district: (09) 439 3330 ext 65401
  • 1737 for lower-pressure emotional support

Kerikeri / Bay of Islands

For Kerikeri, Paihia, Kawakawa and nearby communities.

  • Emergency: 111
  • Mid North district: 0800 643 647
  • 1737 for call or text support

Kaitaia / Far North

For Kaitaia and wider Far North communities.

  • Emergency: 111
  • Far North: (09) 408 9187
  • After hours: 0800 223 371

Rural Northland

For smaller communities where distance, transport, and access may affect support pathways.

  • Emergency: 111
  • 1737 for free call or text support
  • Use nearest urgent health or hospital pathway if safety is a concern

Coastal communities

For smaller coastal communities across Northland where local access may vary.

  • Emergency: 111
  • 1737 for emotional support anytime
  • Use local health, emergency, or hospital pathways if urgent

Lower-pressure support options

Some people need quieter options before they can make a phone call. Lower-pressure support can include texting 1737, asking someone to stay nearby, writing down what is happening, or using a support person to help explain things.

Call or text 1737

Useful when someone needs to talk or text with a trained support person.

Ask someone to stay nearby

A trusted person can reduce pressure, help with transport, or support the call.

Write down key details

Helpful notes include location, immediate risks, medication, support people, and what feels hard right now.

Support for different needs

Some people need crisis support that is identity-safe, neurodivergent-friendly, culturally safe, youth-friendly, disability-accessible, or whānau-aware.

Youth & teens

Use simple language, reduce pressure, offer choices, and involve safe adults where appropriate.

Parents, carers & whānau

Supporters may need guidance too when someone they care about is unsafe or overwhelmed.

Neurodivergent people

Lower stimulation, clear choices, written options, and extra processing time can make support safer.

Māori & kaupapa support

Cultural safety, whānau involvement, and trusted community connections can be important parts of support.

LGBTQIA+ support

Identity-safe support matters when crisis is linked to safety, belonging, gender, sexuality, or rejection.

Rural access support

Transport, distance, phone access, and local service availability may affect how someone gets help.

What to do next

When someone is distressed, the next step does not need to be perfect. Start with safety, reduce immediate risks, stay connected, and contact the most appropriate support.

1. Check immediate safety

If there is danger now, call 111 or go to the nearest emergency department.

2. Contact support

Use 1737, emergency services, or the nearest local urgent health pathway depending on urgency.

3. Plan follow-up

After the immediate crisis, consider GP follow-up, community support, peer support, whānau support, or practical support.

Reminder for later polish: Northland is on the watchlist for possible future split-out if content grows too large. Likely future split areas include Whangārei, Kaipara, and Far North.