Latest news with #Enliven


NZ Herald
19-05-2025
- Business
- NZ Herald
Hillier Centre in Mount Maunganui closes after 37 years of service
It offered counselling, mental and physical health support, parenting programmes, community corrections services, and spaces for community groups to gather. The building was sold by Perpetual Guardian, which manages The Hillier Bequest Charitable Trust, to Metlifecare in 2022. A Metlifecare spokesperson confirmed the purchase and said the company had worked with the occupants to keep them informed throughout the process. The closure has prompted several organisations to relocate. Tauranga Family Works, a key tenant, moved its operations to 126 11th Ave on May 12, offering continued access to essential services such as counselling and social work services for children and families, Women Against Violence Education (WAVE), Social Workers in Schools, Parenting Through Separation and the Restore programme. Enliven, which provides home-based support and individualised funding, will also move into the new facility. A spokesperson for Presbyterian Support Northern, which manages both Family Works and Enliven, said the advantages of moving included a more central location for clients, ground floor access, greater service visibility, a purpose-built fit-out for its teams and more opportunity for collaboration. Headway Brain Injury Association BOP relocated to 53 Fraser St, co-locating with Breast Cancer Support Services. Headway longtime employee Dianne Beveridge, who retired last year after more than 30 years with the organisation, said news of the building's sale had been 'unsettling' at first, but the organisation was 'very happy' with its new space. The Department of Corrections service centre has been operating at the Hillier Centre since 2009, providing reintegration programmes and managing individuals serving community sentences. Corrections general manager Brent Reilly confirmed the current tenancy agreement, managed through Presbyterian Support Northern, expires on May 31. The department had hoped to renew the lease through September 2025, but Reilly said the building owner requested the space back. 'We are confident of securing space in the Mount Maunganui/Pāpāmoa community before the end of May. 'If there were to end up being a temporary period between leaving our current property and moving to a new one, we will still be able to provide comprehensive support and oversight of the people we manage, in the community and through our three offices in Tauranga and our office in Te Puke.' A legacy of love and community service The Hillier Centre's origins lie in a love story that spanned continents and decades. The facility was established through a charitable bequest by Lieutenant Colonel Victor Florian Hillier and his wife, Hilda Helen Halliday Hillier. The couple emigrated to New Zealand from India in 1946 after long careers in military and civil service under the British Empire. Initially envisioned as a sheltered workshop for people with physical disabilities in the Mount Maunganui area, the Hilliers' legacy evolved into something much broader. Trustees of the Hillier Trust partnered with the Tauranga Hospital Board and Presbyterian Support Northern after the couple's passing in the 1970s to build a community-focused centre that opened in 1986. In 1995, the centre was renamed 'The Hillier Centre,' and its mission was updated: 'To provide a safe place where people in our community can explore options and access resources that will enhance their health and wellbeing.' The Hillier Centre stood as an independent, non-governmental and non-council funded facility — an increasingly rare model in New Zealand's social services landscape. It accommodated many health and support organisations, offering office and consulting space, training venues, and meeting rooms for groups ranging from counselling services to fitness and card clubs. The centre adapted to the growing needs of the community over time, with space to host more than 100 people across its meeting and interview rooms. Its last building extension was completed in 2001, and its strategic location close to bus routes - between Baywave TECT Aquatic Centre and Somerville Retirement Village - made it accessible to many. Hundreds of people passed through its doors each week. Whether seeking help for mental health, escaping violence, managing physical rehabilitation, or simply needing a place to belong, the Hillier Centre was a safe harbour.
Yahoo
17-05-2025
- Business
- Yahoo
Enliven price target lowered to $27 from $36 at JonesResearch
JonesResearch analyst Soumit Roy lowered the firm's price target on Enliven (ELVN) to $27 from $36 and keeps a Buy rating on the shares. The company's abstract from the Phase 1 late line chronic myeloid leukemia trial with ELVN-001 'was met with a lukewarm initial stock reaction that weakened over time,' the analyst tells investors in a research note. The firm says that even though ELVN-001 showed efficacy and safety profile inline with the September 2024 update with two-times the patient population, the market treated the stock with a sell on news approach. Jones sees ELVN-001 performing at least inline with Novartis' Scemblix. Quickly and easily unpack a company's performance with TipRanks' new KPI Data for smart investment decisions Receive undervalued, market resilient stocks straight to you inbox with TipRanks' Smart Value Newsletter Published first on TheFly – the ultimate source for real-time, market-moving breaking financial news. Try Now>> See Insiders' Hot Stocks on TipRanks >> Read More on ELVN: Disclaimer & DisclosureReport an Issue Enliven Therapeutics' ELVN-001: Promising Competitor in the $3 Billion Late Line CML Market Enliven Therapeutics Reports Q1 Results and Pipeline Progress Enliven price target raised to $40 from $39 at H.C. Wainwright Enliven Therapeutics: Strategic Focus and Promising Developments Justify Buy Rating Positive Buy Rating for Enliven Therapeutics Driven by Promising Phase 1 Results of ELVN-001 in CML Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data


Telegraph
24-04-2025
- Health
- Telegraph
The best healthy foods in Aldi and Lidl
In recent years, you might have noticed it is getting increasingly difficult to get round the supermarket without being bombarded with health messaging. A rise in health-conscious shoppers has sparked competition among the supermarket brands, whose 'better basket' health campaigns, gut health ranges and products promising health benefits are coming at us thick and fast. It used to be that the higher-end supermarkets were the go-to shops for health foods, but thankfully it's low-cost ones such as Lidl and Aldi that come up trumps for nutrition staples. As a nutritionist, I find that all too often the latest health fashion translates to 'more is more'. We're seeing unnecessary additions to products in the name of health, when what I want are decent, well-produced essentials without the gimmicks. Cost is an important factor when it comes to staying healthy, so here are the products I rate more highly than the expensive competition. 1. Vitamin-enriched smoothies While smoothies cannot replicate the nutritional advantages of eating whole fruit, they can be a great way of consuming a range of fruits conveniently. The more in the mix, the better, ideally with a vegetable or two thrown in. Vitamin-enriched smoothies tend to come at a price, which is where Lidl's Naturis range is to be recommended. For instance, its Rejuvenate with cucumber, apple, grape, mango and kiwi includes niacin, B6 and riboflavin in addition to matcha and linseed. Aldi's Enliven is another rich-in-vitamins contender. At nearly three times the price, M&S's Revitalise smoothie also includes chicory root fibre, which contains inulin, an ingredient that can trigger gastrointestinal symptoms in irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) sufferers such as bloating, stomach pain and distension. As such, it is not Fodmap-friendly (the Fodmap diet is designed for those with sensitive digestion). Best buy Lidl Naturis Rejuvenate 750ml, £1.75